These videos have been reported, filmed and edited by video-journalist Stephenie Hollyman in Louisiana, Florida and Alabama. All rights reserved 2010.
Gulf Shores Tar-Balls
When tar balls first washed up on the shore of Orange Beach, Alabama, on May 11, 2010, Mayor Tony Kennon was outraged.
Mississippi River
Biologists with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service search for dead or oiled birds.The effect the Mississippi River has on the spill is explored.
Sudsy Oil Spill Pelicans
In a large warehouse at Ft. Jackson, Louisiana, volunteers and employees of Tri-State Bird rescue clean oiled birds with Dawn detergent dish washing soap.
Fish and Wildlife
Biologists from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service search for oiled or dead birds along the Mississippi Delta below Venice, La.
Perdido Pass
Perdido Pass, Alabama, was once favored by Gulf pirates. But oil now sullies the azure waters, something its dynamic Mayor Tony Kennon hopes to change soon.
BP Town Meeting
Angry Cajun fishermen meet with BP officials in a Town meeting in Larose, Louisiana to discuss BP's " Vessels of Opportunity" program.
Shrimping Cajuns
Like a stunned prize-fighter who has just recovered from a knock-out blow, Clifton sits on the edge of his new boat with his uncle and discusses his future.
Booming Oil
Reporting from Grande Isle, Louisiana, video-journalist Stephenie Hollyman explores the arcane science of booming oil.
Looping Oil
Stephenie Hollyman reported, filmed and cut this story in Grande Isle, Louisiana, before the oil hit the shore.
Oiled Birds