| OCR Text |
Show 296 jobs" in green letters before a white screen. The bp logo is in the bottom right corner. Viewers then return to images of the workers. We see quick transitional shots of seven faces of these employees in their working environments. There are men and women, all smiling. Some are working indoors and others outdoors. The ones outdoors are all wearing hard hats and some of them are also wearing protective goggles, while they are placed in different environmental contexts - a couple of them are in desert landscapes or prairies, and one is standing before steel frames and heavy equipment. The employees indoors are working in technical contexts. One is standing in front of a whiteboard with two graphs in red marker ready for analysis. Another is standing in a computer room before numerous screens in the background, and another is standing inside a laboratory where tests are being conducted. These quick profile shots have caught these employees at work. They are of course staged, but viewers get the impression that the camera unexpectedly showed up to document their work. Employees are in scientific labs, pointing to hydraulic pipes, and securing equipment. This documentary footage ends with a clip of a bp gas station, and then returns to the narrator. The narrator appears loyal, sincere, and kind. Throughout the short clip, the camera returns to footage of him standing before a beach speaking plainly and truthfully to audiences. Viewers are told his name is Fred Lemond and he is a bp Operations Manager. He is wearing a plain, light brown long-sleeved shirt with nothing but the bp helios logo on his left breastplate. His words document the video, but it is mostly the sound of his voice that gives bp a caring, trustworthy corporate persona. It is warm and compassionate. This is a man who cares about the Gulf more than anything else in the world, and he has humbly taken time out of his busy day to talk straightly to those |