Women’s Show 4/20 – Connie May Fowler and Deepwater Horizon Blowout

Share
Deepwater Horizon Offshore Drilling unit aflame

Thursday, April 20th is the 7th anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon Blowout…

What is the status of the gulf, particularly the health of all the living occupants?  The dead can’t tell their stories, can they?  Saturday, April 22nd  is Earth Day.  Is it ironic that we are having a March for Science to respect the work and our needs at this time?  And next week we March for Climate Change.  Do I need to connect the dots? 

Photo by Arlene Engelhardt

I repeat, the dead cannot tell their stories, but Connie May Fowler can.  Her latest book, A Million Fragile Bones, can tell it.  She was living in Alligator Point on Florida’s Gulf Coast, surrounded by dunes and water birds and watching dolphins swim in the distance.  Hers is a personal memoir of what happened to the Gulf.  She no longer lives on Alligator Point.  CONNIE MAY FOWLER, award-winning novelist including Before Women Had Wings, memoirist, screenwriter, and teacher,  will tell us why.

RIKI OTT, PhD., marine biologist, audacious science battler with the Exon Valdez tragedy, immediately knew when she heard about the blowout that the people of the gulf needed her hard-earned expertise.  She headed for the Gulf and has spent a great deal of time since then collecting data, advising people, helping organize, trying to expose the truth of the ramifications of that blowout and the ramifications of the cost of our depending on fossil fuels. 

Riki is quite aware that the problems the people in Pennsylvania and Ohio and other fracking communities are very similar to what she saw with the Exxon Valdez and the  Deepwater Horizon Blowout.  These are not unique tragedies.  Who is spinning this web of death?  Riki will speak with  us about these tragedies.  Surely we do not want to become A MILLION FRAGILE BONES prematurely and unnecessarily.  Dust to dust, but need it be toxic dust?

Tune in Thursday at 10 am at 88.5. If you missed the show you can always listen to it (or any of the shows for the last few years) here.

You may also like

A Voice for the Truth Commission, Energy Crisis

African farmers look to the past and the future to...

17 Bands in 17 days – Day 7: How LGBTQ+ band Divine AF breaks boundaries

If you would like to see what makes Divine AF...

17 Bands in 17 days – Day 8: The surf-horror soundtrack of Black Valley Moon

Get ready to experience an incredible lineup featuring 17 bands...

Florida Wildlife Corridor
Florida Supreme Court justices are urged to weigh environmental funding

Environmental groups Thursday urged the Florida Supreme Court to take...

Ways to listen

WMNF is listener-supported. That means we don't advertise like a commercial station, and we're not part of a university.

Ways to support

WMNF volunteers have fun providing a variety of needed services to keep your community radio station alive and kickin'.

Follow us on Instagram

Bodyrock
Player position: