A solemn memory of Shark Week for BadDiverBill
BadDiversTV is behind Bill Hill now but his love for scuba remains and two new passions — music and promoting causes — have been added.
When a funding deal fell through for BadDiverBill’s Quest, which was to find the most interesting DIVE sites, Dive buddies and DIVE bars, Hill’s pseudonym of BadDiverBill was set aside, along with his trademark “adult beverages,” hat and sunglasses. They’re gone, but not forgotten. If the opportunity arose, says Bill, “BadDiverBill would don his hat and sunglasses and make a cocktail.” However, BadDiversTV.com exists online forever.
Still, the character he created is not what drives him now. Instead, it’s his growing awareness of causes that have become important to him, namely, protecting the ocean and supporting an orphanage in Honduras. He came face to face with both causes through diving and is expressing them with music.
The song “Weightless,” for which he wrote the lyrics, embraces the magic of both diving and its medium, the sea. A portion of the song’s downloads will go to The Ocean Conservancy.
It was his passion for diving that took Bill Hill to Honduras, but it was the needs of an orphanage in that country that captured his heart. He has made nine trips there, combining diving and helping out at the orphanage. There, he met Paola, a young girl who was abandoned by her mother. She is still in school there.
Hill was inspired by her and decided to make a little video and write a song about her, which he called Pequena Rosa (Little Rose).
“Dancing was her thing. She dances to forget about things. All the girls take care of each other,” says Hill, who wrote all the lyrics for the song on the flight from El Salvador back home to Los Angeles. “I look forward to dancing with her to this song.”
His friend, musician Jeff Alan Ross, wrote the music. Some of the proceeds from the song will go to the orphanage.
On the flight home, Hill came up with another idea that he called “Your cause, your anthem,” which is to help others promote their cause.
Back in the water, August is the month of Shark Week, in which Hill served as a safety diver for a movie to re-enact the death in May of 2008 of a 66-year-old diver who was attacked by a Great White just north of San Diego. The shark was estimated to be about 12 to 17 feet in length. To illustrate the damage to the diver’s legs by the attack, the filmmakers wanted to cut up the legs of the wetsuit the actor playing the deceased man would wear. In choosing a wetsuit to destroy, they were looking for the one that was in the worst shape, with the promise that the donor could buy a new wetsuit at cost. They chose BadDiverBill’s wetsuit.
Bill was one of three safety divers on the “Body Glove” boat owned by Bob and Pattie Meistrell. Bob and his late twin brother, Bill, had been innovators of wet suits. “I was honoured and privileged to be on the Body Glove boat when he was the captain.
“One day we were shooting the actor stuff of them swimming when he (the victim) was hit, the panicking and the swimmers coming to the rescue. A lot of my job was just being behind the camera man about 15 feet down, or on the boat with no scuba gear.”
Hill remembers “the kind of respectful feeling on the boat” because they were re-enacting a man’s death.
He was told his job was finished for the day so he took off his gear. Then they decided to take one more shot on the other side of the boat. The actress swam quickly to the side where the shooting was to be, but the older actor portraying the victim of the shark attack seemed to be struggling in the water. He kept going under the surface in his attempt to get to the other side of the boat, the challenge made more difficult by wearing BadDiverBill’s damaged wetsuit. Knowing the actor had been in the water all day and was probably tired, Hill dove in, grabbed him and took him to the other side.
Another chapter had been written in the evolution of BadDiverBill.