Media Helping BP 'Whitewash' Damage Where's all the oil? Look under the sand By John Johnson Suggested by Altoecko Posted Jul 28, 2010 5:58 PM CDT Copied An oil slick sits on the surface of the water a few miles from the site of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico Saturday, July 17, 2010. (AP Photo/Dave Martin) Mac McClelland is a little tired of all the stories in the mainstream media about how the oil from the BP spill is pretty much gone. (Here's one that set him off.) He texts reporter friends and quickly turns up stories of "gobs of oil" on beaches untouched by cleanup crews. "It's BP's job to whitewash this story and make it easier to indulge the desire to forget about the scope of the devastation," he writes at Mother Jones. "Not the media's." It's a matter of looking beneath the surface, literally. "I can't even count the number of correspondents down here who've pointed out that digging a finger under the surface of supposedly clean sand turns up crude, or the number of cleanup workers who've said cleanup efforts are strictly cosmetic, or that no matter what they do the contamination just keeps bubbling up." Read These Next President warns Exxon over its wary response to Venezuela. Golden Globes ends with an upset. Fed's Jerome Powell usually holds his fire. But no more. Nikki Glaser jokes about Epstein files at the Golden Globes. Report an error