“When I wake up out there, my heart starts fluttering. It’s like you smoked a pack of cigarettes then held your breath,” says Willman, who says he hasn’t smoked in 9 months. “I get an immediate headache when I come in contact with crude oil,” he says. “And my skin itches like it’s cracking.”

Captain Dave Willman on skimming oil in the Gulf

 

http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2010-06/54324674.jpg

Fans of classic TV may always look into John Goodman’s face and want to cry out, “Dan!” — recalling him as the gentle working-class husband he played for nine seasons on “Roseanne.” Goodman’s OK with that, but lately he’s been working on shifting his image with other roles, working alongside Al Pacino in HBO’s “You Don’t Know Jack” and in a regular part on David Simon’s “Treme.” Plus, with “Treme,” Goodman gets to work out of his own backyard, as a longtime resident of New Orleans. But he’s also living with a Big Easy production boom and is learning to take some of his own medicine by living among camera crews everywhere: “I can’t hardly park on my street anymore,” he grumbles genially. But even amid mild complaints, it’s clear that Goodman is happy and in his element.

You live in New Orleans and you work there now on “Treme.” What’s it like making a TV show about the last disaster there while in the midst of the newest one?

Christ. My heart was broken because I thought the city was going to be lost. Canal Street — knee-deep in water; alligators holding up traffic; people on rooftops. So [the oil spill has] dredged up a lot of the old feelings again, a lot of anger and fear. There are T-shirts that say “Defend New Orleans,” and I understand what that means now.

What makes people so passionate about New Orleans?

If I could put my finger on it, I’d bottle it and sell it. I came down here originally in 1972 with some drunken fraternity guys and had never seen anything like it — the climate, the smells. It’s the cradle of music; it just flipped me. Someone suggested that there’s an incomplete part of our chromosomes that gets repaired or found when we hit New Orleans. Some of us just belong here.

How is the “Treme” set different from others you’ve worked on?

There’s less of a feeling of community than, say, on “Roseanne,” because I only work one or two days a week. There are so many story threads going through “Treme” that we’ve had two occasions where the cast has partied — and it was great, all meeting together, because it’s like we’re working on different shows. There were people I’d never met before, but we’re all on the same show.

You were reunited with Al Pacino in “You Don’t Know Jack” for the first time on film since 1989’s “Sea of Love.” Are you friends?

Going back and playing with Al, it’s like picking up a football and chucking it around with someone you went to college with. He’s so cool, man, because he’s so committed to being an actor.

Actors who take on long-running TV roles sometimes have a hard time getting work after — but you never seemed locked into the role of Dan Conner. Did you worry about that?

Maybe in my seventh or eighth year. I thought the show had gone as far as it could, and I was apprehensive that I was trapped there. Plus, there was a lot of extraneous tabloid … going on, and that was tiresome. Plus, I was a pretty good drunk by then.

Has being sober for three years changed the way in which you approach working?

It’s changed everything, dramatically. I’m very passionate about what I do for a living again, and, at the same time, I’m able to take it for what it is. You have to take it seriously, but not over-seriously, and step back and laugh at it. When I was drinking, everything was revolving around “poor me,” I just whined so much and felt so sorry for myself, I was so miserable. It’s a big load off of my back.

You’re Dan to many longtime fans, but I still like you as the 6-foot, 3-inch “consistent panda-bear-shaped” guy from “True Stories.” You sang in that film; do you sing for fun still?

Not so much anymore, now that I quit the social lubricant. One of the things I used to do in New York is get a bunch of guys together in a bar and start doing doo-wop and a capella, whether anyone wanted to hear it or not. But as I sobered up, my ears got better because I don’t sound so hot.

So you won’t be doing a guest role on “Glee” anytime soon then?

[Chuckling] No, I don’t reckon.

(From the LA TImes)

 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports that 82 oiled birds have been rescued from states along the Gulf of Mexico. It says 63 were found in Louisiana, 10 in Alabama, eight in Florida and one in Mississippi.

More at Miami Herald

 

“The show itself is being visually inspired by a blend of turn-of-the-century New Orleans meets psychedelic classic rock,” Lambert says.

Adam Lambert discussing his Glam Nation tour in USA Today

 

Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. announced Tuesday that his office is using “the full weight” of its investigative power to pursue criminal and civil investigations into the oil spill that has devastated the Gulf Coast.

“The Department of Justice will ensure that the American people do not foot the bill for this disaster and that our laws are enforced to the fullest extent possible,” he said.

Read more at the Washington Post

 

The target of most of their frustration was BP, the oil giant that had said that morning the oil volcano under the Gulf of Mexico may not be capped until August — but there was also plenty of invective directed against the federal government, which many of the speakers felt was bowing to the demands of BP rather than taking charge of the situation and telling BP what to do.

From Gambit

 

Dr. John at the BP oil spill protest

from Euronews

 

At the end of the day, the people of Louisiana must demand that the oil stops, our marshes are restored, the bastards that made careless decisions to make themselves billions of dollars at the expense of the working class people of Louisiana get to contemplate their atrocious behavior from a prison cell, and the U.S. Govt. must enforce real environmental regulations that prevent and criminalize this type of devastation at the hands of irresponsible and mismanaged capitalism.

Jacqui Gibson-Clark (via jlangenbeck)

 

BP representative Hugh Depland said that while the company wasn’t sure exactly when more workers would be hired, the $239 billion company was spending “a lot of money, time and effort to bring this event to a close.” And to those worried restaurateurs facing rising prices for shrimp and oysters? In the words of BP rep Randy Prescott: “Louisiana isn’t the only place that has shrimp.”

from the Lens (notice in the comments section of The Lens article Randy Prescott’s phone number happens to be listed)

 

jlangenbeck:

RT @mat: Still find it hard to believe the full weight and might of the United States government cannot manage to shut down one leaky pipe