Haven't done one of these for quite a while, so in keeping with this weeks theme, here are links to some of the best BP/Gulf Oil Spill articles from the Mighty World Wide Web of sites:
The Onion: Massive Flow Of Bullshit Continues To Gush From BP Headquarters
'Though no one knows exactly how much of the dangerous bullshit is currently gushing from BP headquarters, estimates put the number at somewhere between 25,000 and 70,000 words a day.'
Telegraph: BP buys top Google Search for 'oil spill'
'BP has bought the top Google and Yahoo! search result for terms like "oil spill" in a bid to recover its public image following the massive oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico.'
www.stuff.co.nz: Photographer dives into Gulf - sees only oil
'I think to myself: No fish, no bird, no turtle would ever be able to clean this off itself. If any animal were to end up in this same puddle, there is almost no way it could escape.'
BPGlobalPR on Twitter
Piss take tweeter, whose t-shirt sales have made $10,000 for conservation charity Gulf Restoration Network.
Pretty handy animated news sequence explaining what happened to the rig, where the leaks are and what can be done to stop it. Yes, overly simple, but a good way to show any kids curious what's going on :
Article Source

The Onion: Massive Flow Of Bullshit Continues To Gush From BP Headquarters
'Though no one knows exactly how much of the dangerous bullshit is currently gushing from BP headquarters, estimates put the number at somewhere between 25,000 and 70,000 words a day.'
Telegraph: BP buys top Google Search for 'oil spill'
'BP has bought the top Google and Yahoo! search result for terms like "oil spill" in a bid to recover its public image following the massive oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico.'
www.stuff.co.nz: Photographer dives into Gulf - sees only oil
'I think to myself: No fish, no bird, no turtle would ever be able to clean this off itself. If any animal were to end up in this same puddle, there is almost no way it could escape.'
BPGlobalPR on Twitter
Piss take tweeter, whose t-shirt sales have made $10,000 for conservation charity Gulf Restoration Network.
Pretty handy animated news sequence explaining what happened to the rig, where the leaks are and what can be done to stop it. Yes, overly simple, but a good way to show any kids curious what's going on :
Article Source

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