Resource and of course human ‘insecurity' are the new frontier of academic and media analysis. Which stories receive media coverage, or more precisely, intense media scrutiny, is a function of the geopolitical relevance of the setting, and whether the disaster can be mined for a variety of human-interest stories, the preferred format of many 24-hour news outlets. The BP oil spill was for many a ‘perfect storm' worthy of intense analysis because of its location in international waters, bordering a wealthy nation. Further, the protagonists, the Louisiana residents as represented by the U.S. government, and the antagonist, British Petroleum, a huge multinational with European roots, pitted two powerful nations which are typically business/political allies. Amidst the mainstream media coverage of all things BP, African, alternative and internet media, began to contrast coverage of the four-month oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico with the four decade leakage of petroleum in the Niger Delta. Then there was the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline, DAPL and the #NoDAPL movement, which raised the level of social media and global reporting to a new and unprecedented level.