Jimmy Stewart’s ‘Thunder Bay’ — Hollywood Prophecy
by Humberto FontovaIn the 1953 movie “Thunder Bay,” Jimmy Stewart plays the complicated protagonist, Steve Martin, the hard-bitten, ex-navy oil engineer who built the first offshore oil platform off Louisiana in 1947. “The brawling, mauling story of the biggest bonanza of them all!” reads the Universal ad for the studio’s first wide-screen movie.

Much of the brawling by Stewart and his henchmen was against the local Cajuns who fished for a living. Their livelihood, it seemed obvious at the time, would soon vanish amidst a hellbroth of irreversible pollution. The movie covers a time period of barely one year yet ends on a happy note of conciliation as the fishermen reaped a bonanza almost as big as Jimmy’s itself. The oil structures had kicked in as artificial reefs and made possible a bigger haul of seafood than anything in these fishermen’s lifetimes.
Alas, brawling by the real life Jimmy Stewart characters later cranked up to a level that dwarfed anything in the movie—but against a much more fanatical, underhanded and devious foe: environmentalists.
If bona-fide science has crowned Global Warmists with ten foot dunce caps, then half a century of scientific evidence has crowned anti-offshore drilling activists with fifty foot dunce caps. Astoundingly, over the ensuing decades the verdict of this 1953 movie (that offshore oil drilling far from an environmental disaster was actually an environmental bonanza) has been pounded home with a vengeance. To wit:
With 3,203 of the 3,729 offshore oil platforms in the Gulf of Mexico off her coast, Louisiana provides almost a third of North America’s commercial fisheries. A study by LSU’s sea grant college shows that 85 percent of Louisiana’s offshore fishing trips target these structures. “Oil platforms as artificial reefs support fish densities 10 to 1000 times that of adjacent sand and mud bottom, and almost always exceed fish densities found at both adjacent artificial reefs of other types and natural hard bottom,” says a study by Dr Bob Shipp, professor at the Marine Sciences department of the University of South Alabama in Mobile, Alabama, and currently, the vice-chair of the Gulf of Mexico Fisheries Management Council. “Evidence indicates that massive areas of the northwestern Gulf of Mexico were essentially empty of snapper stocks for the first hundred years of the fishery. Subsequently, areas in the western Gulf have become the major source of red snapper, concurrent with the appearance of thousands of petroleum platforms.” (italics mine).
More recently, the red snapper catch from the northwestern Gulf (Louisiana, studded with oil platforms) is estimated 6 to 7 times greater (italics mine) than the catch from the eastern Gulf (bereft of oil platforms.)”
That this proliferation of seafood came because – rather than in spite – of the oil production rattled many environmental cages and provoked a legion of scoffers.
Amongst the scoffers were some The Travel Channel producers, fashionably greenish in their views. They read these claims in a book titled “The Helldiver’s Rodeo.” (and Ted Nugent’s blurb sure didn’t help against their scoffing!) The book described an undersea panorama that (if true) could make an interesting show for the network, they concluded, while still scoffing.
They scoffed as we rode in from the airport. They scoffed over raw oysters, grilled redfish and seafood gumbo that night. More scoffing through the Hurricanes at Pat O’Brien’s. They scoffed even while suiting up in dive gear and checking the cameras as we tied up to an oil platform 20 miles in the Gulf.
But they came out of the water bug-eyed and indeed produced and broadcast a Travel Channel program showcasing a panorama that turned on its head every environmental superstition against offshore oil drilling. Schools of fish filled the water column from top to bottom – from 6-inch blennies to 12-foot sharks. Fish by the thousands. Fish by the ton.
The cameras were going crazy. Do I focus on the shoals of barracuda? Or that cloud of jacks? On the immense schools of snapper below, or on the fleet of tarpon above? How ’bout this – WHOOOAA – hammerhead! We had some close-ups, too, of coral and sponges, the very things disappearing off Florida’s (that bans offshore oil drilling) pampered reefs. Off Louisiana, they sprout in colorful profusion from the huge steel beams – acres of them. You’d never guess this was part of that unsightly structure above. The panorama of marine life around an offshore oil platform staggers anyone who puts on goggles and takes a peek, even (especially!) the most worldly scuba divers. Here’s a video peek at this seafood bonanza.
And oh!…as a fanatical fisherman/scuba-diver I almost forgot to mention this trivial detail: the oil production platforms off Louisiana’s coast also produce 80 percent of the oil and 72 percent of the natural gas produced in the U.S.—and without causing a single major oil spill in half a century of this process. This record stands despite dozens of hurricanes – including the two most destructive in North American history, Camille and Katrina – repeatedly battering the drilling and production structures.






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49 Comments
Great read, Humberto (and Thunder Bay is a crackerjack film by the way).
Being on the left, especially the GREEN edge of the left means never having to say "I'm sorry." Business and industry got onboard with environmentalism from the get go (example: there are more trees in North America now than when the pilgrims arrived). Why? For self-preservation. That's why every part of the tree, cow, chicken, fish, etc. is used so there is NO waste. The same goes for not eviscerating a source of profit. Fishermen do not try to find ways to increase yields to please the greenweenies. Never have. Never will.
True story: Jimmy Stewart agreed to this role because of the chance to play the banjo, but he flat out refused to wear the arrow-through-the-head prop. He almost walked off the set when the director insisted he and Dan Duryea put their arms around each others' shoulders and say, "We're two wild and crazy guys!"
Okay, not true story. It was a good movie, though. Stewart's collaborations with Anthony Mann are almost as legendary as his works with Hitchcock. The only thing this one was missing was Arthur Kennedy, who made everything better.
Angry fishermen: Martin, your oil wells are going to kill our fishing industry!
James Stewart character: Welllll, ex-CUUUUUSE MEEEEEEEE!"
Don't you know anyone who disrespects environmentalists is doomed to burn in the fires of global warming?
You cannot question the word of Gore!
I swear, its like you're one of those irrational right-wing Christian nuts…
THREAD-JACK ALERT BUT I DON'T KNOW WHERE TO TO TO REPORT THIS: On two different computers in two different locations, my attempt to go to the biggovernment.com site presents me with either a download of the link name itself, or an offer to do so, dependent on the browser.
Is anyone else encountering this?
Me like!
Sometimes I get a "DONE" in the page and no more loading and the page is blank (Firefox 3.5.8 on Snow Leopard) and I've contacted the BIGs about this, but it still happens from time to time.
Well it did have Joanne Dru (huminuhuminuh)
Human ingenuity and mother nature sometimes coexist in quite surprising ways. This is one example. "Urban" deer are a major overpopulation problem at a park here in KC, so much so, that the city wasted a ton of money training police sharpshooters to cull the herd rather than making money by auctioning off bowhunting licenses to hunters eager to take a crack at a sheltered, well-fed herd sure to have some trophy bucks in it. Obviously, deer and cities here go well together. Manatees in Florida like to shelter in the cooling water lagoons of power plants in winter because the water is warm. As a side benefit, none of them get run over by boats there because none are allowed in those pools.
The list goes on, but greenies want us to lock ourselves up away from nature in a sterile bag. We can't remove ourselves from nature anymore than she removes herself from us.
Not to mention our three house cats that would have had very short lives were it not for their "masters."
Excellent video. Great to see so many happy fishes and I am glad American technology could help.
Ok, that gave me a chuckle. Kudos.
Yeah i am getting it to, but i am not downloading anything, so i do not know what it does
I always liked this movie and the rationale of this post is why. Everyone was against the drilling… and Stewarts' character has to fight an uphill battle to get production going…. and the fisherman angle… and guess what… he turns out to be quite a swell guy to the fishermen AND he's producing oil AND jobs! … and he's making an honest living. Great messages in this story… I wish it was available as a stand alone DVD.. ( have to buy in a set as of now..)
Great article too. Thanks. Texas and Louisiana are awesome.
Greenies and other enviro wacko's can not let facts get in the way of their argument otherwise
they have no arument. Settled science is the source of their argument structure and they
don't allow any, as Obama has labeled "talking Points" to interfere with their position.
You don't see the enviro wacko's backing down from any major position they hold for Global Warming
reguardless of a growing mountain of admitted bogus claims do you? Liberal states like Oregon,
Washington, California are full speed ahead with their commitment to the Green movement. Its power
they are after and real or unreal they intend to prevail. You would think off shore oil production may put a sizeable hole in California's budget deficit but common sense moved out of that state long ago.
Me three. Not sure what is up.
Just think if California turned away from its misguided greenness and allowed off-shore oil rigs…
– Licensing fees for rigs would help bring down California's huge deficit
– Rig construction and operation would create tens of thousands of jobs
– Oil availability would reduce the price of gasoline
– Increased number of harvestable fish would provide inexpensive protein to citizens
– Creation of reefs would open up a new tourism opportunity
Hmmm. All that potential money. Nah, lets listen to Greenpeace and Sierra Club. They wouldn't steer us wrong!
Yeah, we've got some work to do overturning that pernicious old trope that Rousseau gave us – "Humans bad, nature good." The fact that it's based on a false assumption (so humans aren't a product of nature?) hasn't impeded its sinister longevity. That it got supercharged by the '60s cultural tidal wave hasn't helped. Generations of work ahead of us, people.
Pretty damn cool.
Humberto,
Great writing and subject matter. This is a real service you are doing. Keep it up.
Makes entirely too much sense.
Let list the down side
– ahhhhhhhhh………..don't rush me I'm trying to think here.
I spent some time flying helicopters serving the offshore Oil platform's and well pilots do a lot of sitting around on some contracts. A fishing rod is part of a pilots gear. You could almost bet that every night most of the time you could have your own caught fish for dinner. Hard times down in Offshore Oil, and the Helicopter companies that service the industry. I would go back in a heart beat. Lots of fish to be had if you like to fish.
Don't know why this should come as a surprise to anyone who understands anything about underwater structure and fish habitat. Fish avoid the open water, where they are vulnerable to their predators, and their prey don't frequent for the same reason. Underwater structure provides both shelter, and congregations of prey species.
As somebody once said: fish are only as smart as they have to be; they're only hard to catch when you overthink the process. Environmentalists are overthinking themselves into extinction.
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I must over think it, because there are days when I couldn't even buy a fish. Fly Fishing and Trout is really my thing by the way along with flying.
Here is the actual map of the platforms (not rigs) and pipelines in the Gulf of Mexico.
http://www.gomr.mms.gov/homepg/lsesale/visual1.pd...
Without Louisiana Offshore Oil & Gas Production, it would be a very cold winter for most everyone east of the Rockies.
Those fishermen who embraced the new way of getting to oil and subsequently gas, are now quite wealthy. They turned their boats from fishing into ferrying men and supplies for money. The vast majority of those living on the coast actually embraced the new opportunity at a better standard of living.
For security reasons you really need to update Firefox and if nothing else it's supposed to be better, faster etc.
Environmental Superstition — great riff. So much of the assertions they make are just not so.
The global warming fraud shows just how insidious, patient, coercive and evil they are.
.
Even if you never use it on PCs make sure IE is updated and this is not optional if you want to be as secure as possible,
Another item the environmental whackos will ignore, deny, or lie about. Great Video!!!! Thanks for the link, LOL (in an evil way). I think I will send it to my academic comrades (most of them are Progressive/Socialist, and thinks Comrade is a compliment. Jokes on them though :0) who are always decrying man-made destruction of the environment. This should earn me more crazy points in their book.
We've got a MASSIVE problem with feral hogs in Northern California. The solution seems obvious–year-round no bag limit, all hunters welcome. But NO. You gotta get a license, you gotta follow a bunch of idiot enviro and Fish and Game regulations, hunting season limited, etc. The Fish and Game Dept have these laughably small teams of pig killers who wander around a few months of the year and probably slow the rate of increase by 1% a year.
Entire parks have simply been abandoned to the pigs and shut down (one in San Jose!).
You don't know whether to laugh or cry.
Oh yeah, and don't forget to mention that even though there were about 2,900 platforms that were in the path of hurricanes of Katrina and Rita. In all, between the two storms, they destroyed 109 oil platforms and five drilling rigs in the Gulf of Mexico and not a drop of oil escaped to "dirty" the gulf.
I almost choked I laughed so hard.
What you need to understand is the left wants the sea to run out of fish. Pointing out to them that oil platforms help increase aquatic life runs counter to their mission. The left needs apocolyptic issues, such as the sea is dying, in order to try to force their totalitarian agenda. Showing them how to fix an issue or that an issue really does not exist disarms them of their "sky is falling" propoganda. The left does not want solutions, it needs problems.
I dearly love the Louisiana coast. It's red mud beaches by the mile, knocking oysters off the jettys at low tide, crabs by the ice chest full in every bar ditch, oil rigs winking in the night, and furnished shacks you can rent for $60.00. It is truly a sportsman's paradise.
I am not going to tell you where that is. Find it yourself.
Charlie
President Reagan always thought that Jimmy Stewart should have been President instead of him. Jimmy Stewart and President Reagan you boys are flying now go in peace and if you see my Grandfather (15th Airforce 461st Bomb Group) tell him I miss him.
Sometimes I get a "DONE" in the page and no more loading and the page is blank (Firefox 3.5.8 on Snow Leopard) and I've contacted the BIGs about this, but it still happens from time to time.
Unbelievable! They have a similar problem with white tail deer in NJ, that aharris mention in KC. The deer population increased rapidly and people loved seeing Bambi walk around. It wasn't until Bambi started eating the expensive plants and shrubbery in Princeton and other tony areas that started changing peoples minds, well that and the car accidents that resulted. But the state couldn't. or wouldn't implement a proper method of culling the deer population.
I could go on and on Manji88, but to change the subject your post gave me a hankering for BB-Q ribs, and a pulled pork sandwich! yum, yum!!
I'd like to recommend "The Helldiver's Rodeo." Kind of a gonzo journalism death-scuba book. As a diver for the last 25 years, I thought it was great, accurate, and hysterically funny.
I'm a liberal Democrat with a green-tending outlook. I read this article with great interest and found it enlightening and helpful for my understanding of the off-shore drilling situation. I like getting new information to help me process my decisions and positions.
I wish your commenters were less interested in demonizing and name-calling than they are, and perhaps a little more interested in being as helpful as you.
Thanks for a very interesting article.
Louisiana: I am proud to call it home! Y'all come! If the Saints can be in, then win, the Super Bowl, then Louisiana indeed has surprises and delights and bounty for America.
The name calling is because we – unlike you – were not entirely surprised. When you are confronted with untruths on a daily bases, you get grumpy. What excuse do your liberal activists have?
[...] Entire environmental intransigence and blockheadedness here. [...]
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Sometimes I want to shoot my TV, The guy on the fishing show this weekend caught more fish than I caught in all of last year.
Just ain't fair
Here in Texas we have a Sun City (Retirement community) that is having a deer problem, They are trying to find a way to trap the deer and release them "out in the wild". I lived 2 miles away "out in the wild" and it was legal for me to hunt outside my back door.
The deer stayed away from my place, I had field grass, they preferred the nice manicured lawns in the retirement community.
Go figure.
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