Chris Cooper
Chris Cooper
Christopher Walton "Chris" Cooperis an American film actor. He became well known in the late 1980s. He has appeared in supporting performances in several major Hollywood films, including the drama American Beauty, the biopic about a NASA engineer titled October Sky, the action spy film The Bourne Identity, the biographical sports psychological-drama thriller film Seabiscuit, the biographical film about Truman Capote, Capote, the geopolitical thriller Syriana, the action-thriller The Kingdom, the crime drama The Town, and the musical comedy film...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionMovie Actor
Date of Birth9 July 1951
CityKansas City, MO
CountryUnited States of America
I suspect that a lot of studio executives still think of me as 'what's-his-name'.
I'm thrilled with my body of work.
I've been around horses, but I certainly wouldn't call myself a horseman by any means. It's a combination of being very aware of them, and not trusting them.
You look at a herd of cattle and well, they all look the same... but they know. They all have an individual personality, and those personalities change from day to day. They can have their grumpy days and their happy days and their serene days. But it's unpredictable. You can't be off in outer space when you're dealing with animals.
You don't throw away a whole life just because it's banged up a little.
When I feel like I'm doing my best work, there is a bit of a freedom, a bit of flight that you're not so much losing yourself but you're sort of in the zone
Unfortunately, when a violation is brought to our attention, state law does not provide flexibility,
We're drawing up a plan that will fix it. But for now, we're staying on top of it with sand and salt.
It would be like getting off at a rest stop.
I don't know if we've ever been this inexperienced. We're going to have to be a team that executes well and manufactures runs, and play smart baseball.
In the past, anytime we were awarded a contract, it would take 30 to 90 days to get phone service to the new site. Even when we got the phone service up and running, paper-based information still had to be sent by express delivery or fax between remote offices and headquarters daily.
It shows how much Congress is in the pocket of the oil industry.
It was such a success that our users wouldn't let us give it back to SOS until we had our own system in place.
This is what happens with any other piece of infrastructure. As it gets older, things happen that we need to deal with.