‘Landman’ star gets seat at the table in Trump-era energy push as Hollywood meets the oil patch
"Landman" star Andy Garcia joined top U.S. energy leaders, stakeholders and lawmakers in Washington this week, saying his work on the show offers a rare window into the dedication of...
By Fox News · Fox News
"Landman" star Andy Garcia joined top U.S. energy leaders, stakeholders and lawmakers in Washington this week, saying his work on the show offers a rare window into the dedication of oil workers and the complex process behind bringing U.S. energy to market. Garcia’s show centers on the struggles of people working in the Permian Basin of West Texas, and his headlining of this week’s forum in Washington, D.C., brought the Trump-era theme of "American energy dominance" full circle to give the public a glimpse into that oft-underreported lifestyle. Garcia told American Petroleum Institute president Mike Sommers during his keynote discussion that the American oil industry ’s complexities, as they play out dramatized on the screen, are something that many people never see or think of. IN 2026, ENERGY WAR’S NEW FRONT IS AI, AND US MUST WIN THAT BATTLE, API CHIEF SAYS "You learn a lot about things that you wouldn't necessarily just sort of take for granted," he said. "The reality of [how] the oil gets pumped out of the ground. And then, there's a company that pumps it and then refines it, and that ends up being used in all these different varieties of things." He said viewers of "Landman" get an important window into the industry itself because of how closely showrunner Taylor Sheridan depicts that environment; and the way Billy Bob Thornton and Sam Elliott portray characters that seem true-to-life for those actually living and working on the oil patch. GOP EYES VENEZUELA'S UNTAPPED OIL WEALTH AS DEMOCRATS SOUND ALARM OVER TAXPAYER RISK Garcia said he got "a deeper understanding and education about the industry itself and the use of petroleum and how it's everywhere – everyday, everything we touch [has] there's a byproduct of it, it seems." Garcia quipped he got "sucked in" to the energy industry’s depiction while watching the first season – for which he only starred in the finale – and after reading its scripts as he prepared for his own debut. TRUMP ANNOUNCES VENEZUELA T…