May 3 look at okc

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LOCAL ENTERTAINMENT AND NEWS FOR PEOPLE WHO PAY ATTENTION

MAY 3 – MAY 16 2018 • VOL. 14 • ISSUE 9 LOOKATOKC.COM

Artistic balance Marissa Raglin checks in as Skirvin artist in residence . . . pg. 14

SNACK WITH SCOTTIE’S DELI PAGE 18

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MEALING IT IN WITH JAPANESE BREAKFAST PAGE 10


from the top

LOOKatOKC 18 | Uptown deli

Eric Fossett’s Scottie’s Deli opened last fall, offering deli favorites inspired by many cultures and his family’s past. The pastrami and corned beef are made over weeks, and the breads, soups and salads are all made from scratch, helping draw more attention to the Tower Theatre complex.

10 | Mealing it in

Japanese Breakfast’s Michelle Zauner turned to food and music to cope with tragedy. Nathan Poppe interviewed the songwriter about her sophomore record “Soft Sounds From Another Planet,” designing video games and directing music videos.

20 | Changes in store

Expansion coming to Byron’s Liquor Warehouse in Oklahoma City. Steve Lackmeyer shares the update on one of OKC’s most popular liquor stores.

Find the LOOK photographers • LOOK photographers will be in Bricktown, Midtown and other hot spots.

The Oklahoman Media Group LOOKatOKC EDITOR Nathan Poppe PROJECT DESIGNER Chris Schoelen ADVERTISING Jerry Wagner (405) 475-3475 Nancy Simoneau (405) 475-3708 NICHE PUBLICATIONS EDITOR Melissa Howell ART DIRECTOR Todd Pendleton COVER DESIGN Chris Schoelen

Check out our online home at newsok.com/entertainment/lookatokc Go to facebook.com/ LOOkatOKC and become a fan. Follow LOOKatOKC on http://twitter.com/LOOKatOKC Single copies of LOOKatOKC may be obtained free of charge at locations from Stillwater to Norman. Additional copies are available for $1 each at The Oklahoman. Wholesale and indiscriminate removal of LOOKatOKC publications from newsstands for purposes other than individual use will result in prosecution. Every effort is made to ensure that all calendar entries areaccurate. LOOKatOKC does not guarantee the events or the schedules. Readers are encouraged to call ahead for exact times and dates. LOOKatOKC is published every other Thursday by The Oklahoman, 100 W. Main, Suite 100, Oklahoma City, OK 73102 For advertising and promotional opportunities please contact The Oklahoman retail advertising department at 475-3338.

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May 3 - May 16, 2018

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May 3 - May 16, 2018

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from the editor

FOLLOW @NATHANPOPPE ON TWITTER

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• To the Tower Theatre crew, keep showing elp, see ya later. all the movies and creating an intimate and After four years of editing beautiful concert setting. I extend that to LOOKatOKC, this marks my last every venue that’s felt like a second home to issue as its barometer of all me. things news and entertainment. It’s funny • To Dusty Gilpin and the Drink & Draw to think I put John Moreland on the cover crew, y’all were so excellent to the magazine of my first issue back in 2014. Now, he’s in and made these pages come alive for years. one of my last stories for this magazine • To every band who landed in this magaunder my tenure. zine, thank you for your time and energy. I This is my final editor note and that’s can’t think of a more fun, vibrant community crazy to me. I’ve written more than 100 to serve. of these and my aim has always been the NATHAN POPPE • To Becky Carman, nobody brings as much same. And that’s to highlight the people LOOKatOKC EDITOR passion to the freelance game as you. If I and places that make Oklahoma worth NPOPPE@OKLAHOMAN.COM worked with three Becky’s then we’d win living in. a Pulitzer Prize. I hope that continues and if you miss me, • To my mom, I’m glad you collected all these issues I won’t be too far away. and display them in the living room. You’re the real MVP. I can’t thank my co-workers enough for helping but And finally, just a big thank you to anyone and everythis magazine together. There’s too many to name but one who has taken the time to read a story in here. If I’d gladly tattoo their initials on my belly if they asked you learned something new — even once — then our nicely. I’d start with BAM. Read her cover story now. efforts were totally worth it. Before I go, I wanted to shoutout a few humans and Here’s looking at you. buildings:

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May 3 - May 16, 2018

March 26, 2014 issue of LOOKatOKC

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LOOKATOKC.COM

May 3 - May 16, 2018

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MUSIC

MARK GIBSON

City with a

‘SOUL’ Tulsa’s Mark Gibson shares details about his new live album BY NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC editor

G

etting everything right on the first try saves time, but it doesn’t always sound the best. Cincinnati-via-Tulsa crooner Mark Gibson tried nailing a live album performance at Soul City in 2017 but needed another shot. And then another after getting sick right before attempt No. 2. “A live record should be less work than a studio album,” Gibson told LOOKatOKC with a laugh. “But when you think about popular live albums, those bands are sometimes 60 performances into a tour. They have so much to pick from. It takes a special night for a band to be on, and it’s tough to get every tune you want.” Sure, it was a lot of work covering two albums worth of material, but Gibson, 35, was glad he tried until he got things mostly right. The third time was a charm and “Live

from Soul City” documents the “perfect storm when a song works in a live setting.” The album was celebrated with a release concert Feb. 3 and Gibson’s returning once again in May. “I wanted to do a live record for me just as much as my fans,” Gibson said during a recent phone interview. “That way, I can know what I sound like when I let emotion rule over technical ability and find something raw and honest. “I also wanted to give this album to the people of Tulsa that enjoyed my music — as a sort of love letter — and a thank you for all their support over the years,” he later added in an email. “I guess I selfishly wanted a time capsule of that moment, too. Who can blame me, though? It was a great time.”

FRESH START Gibson’s bounced between homebases for much of his life. The California-born musician was raised in Broken Arrow, and graduated from the University of Central Oklahoma. He returned to Tulsa in 2011 to complete his first album, “Beautifully Deconstructed,” and made plans to relocate to Austin, Texas. But that never happened. “As the months turned into years, I realized how special of a city Tulsa was, and SEE GIBSON, 7

Top, right: Mark Gibson’s “Live from Soul City” album cover. The record includes live sound engineering from Kendall Osborne and Jordan McLeod. It was mixed by Osborne at Closet Studios and mastered by Chris Wylie at Buffalo Hide Mastering. [IMAGE PROVIDED BY HILL TAYLOR] Right: Mark Gibson celebrated the release of his new record “Live from Soul City” on Feb. 3 in Tulsa. He’s returning to the venue on May 18. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

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MARK GIBSON

MUSIC

IN CONCERT

Mark Gibson When: 9 p.m. May 18. Where: Soul City, 1621 E 11th St., Tulsa. Admission: $10 at the door. Information: Call the venue at 918-582-7685.

Mark Gibson recently moved from Tulsa to Cincinnati and is in the early stages of creating a new studio album. He said he hopes to be in the recording studio by the end of the year. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

GIBSON CONTINUED FROM 6 how lucky I was to get to be a fulltime performer there,” Gibson said. “I began to play full-band shows in 2014 and slowly built up a fan base and an earnest identity as an artist.” Soul City’s one of the venues where Gibson feels most at home. And what’s home without a family? His backing band’s lineup has grown to include Chris Wylie (drums), Ryan Magnani (bass), Kendrik McKinney (keys), Chanda Graham (background vocals), Bill Gable (trumpet) and Mike Cameron (sax). “There started to be special shows happening with the current band lineup that’s on the live album, and I wanted to capture that magic,” he said. “Another reason why I wanted to record a live album was that I moved to Cincinnati with my girlfriend in August 2017.”

CAUTIONARY LOVE SONG Matters of the heart weren’t always

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so stable for Gibson. A standout track on “Live from Soul City” is a newly recorded song called “Somebody Told Me.” You can’t find the cut on any of Gibson’s previous two records. The cautionary love song packs soul, sizzling solos and made me regret missing the original performance. “It’s certainly fun to play,” Gibson said. “The guitar solos — yes, plural, I took some liberties there — subconsciously came out sounding like a lovers’ quarrel. They sort of dance between being bittersweet and aggressive. I look forward to recording this song in the studio.” A few relationships throughout Gibson’s 20’s and an inability to know when to call it quits inspired the track. The line “In this life we see the things we choose to believe” sums up the song’s sentiment nicely, he said. “If that’s where your head’s at, then no friend or family member can talk you out of a bad relationship,” Gibson said. “You sort of reside in your own alternate reality. Luckily, I broke that cycle, and this song is just a historical piece.”

MAY 3–16, 2018

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CONCERT REVIEW

JOHN MORELAND

HOMECOMING

John Moreland sounds off like a pro at the Diamond BY NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC Editor

E

Tulsa’s John Moreland performs live April 11 at the Diamond Ballroom in Oklahoma City. [PHOTOS BY NATHAN POPPE]

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MAY 3–16, 2018

very show has hiccups. Some flubs are just easier to hear than others. As John Moreland’s backing band — the always stellar John Calvin Abney (piano and guitar), Aaron Boehler (bass) and Paddy Ryan (drums) — exited the stage to make way for a few solo numbers, something went wrong. The venue’s house music kicked in while Moreland strummed the fragile opening notes of his original tune, “Cherokee.” The 400 or so Diamond Ballroom patrons nervously chattered while Moreland abandoned the song and emptied his hands. The sound engineer panicked over a switch board. This flub followed another sound issue that took several minutes to fix. These are the kinds of moments that define a professional musician who gets dealt a raw hand. Moreland could’ve walked off, and I don’t think any fans would’ve blamed him. Sure, it was someone’s honest mistake, but an artist of this caliber deserves far better. A few seconds later — which felt like an hour — the Tulsa songwriter cradled his acoustic guitar again. He leaned into the microphone. “Does anybody remember which f------ song I was playing?” he asked while readjusting his seat. That’s the glue that makes Moreland more than just a great songwriter. He’s an entertainer, and there were plenty of plaintive rock songs left to play. Moreland always has been able to cut through the noise. His shows have gotten rowdier with his backing band, but it’s the pin drop silence from his solo performances that pack an emotional gut punch. Kudos to Moreland and Co. for pressing through the technical issues. I’m glad that sleepy weeknight didn’t end with a sour note.

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JOHN MORELAND

CONCERT REVIEW

Drummer Paddy Ryan, bassist Aaron Boehler and guitarist John Calvin Abney (photo at right), play alongside John Moreland on April 11 at the Diamond Ballroom.

Left and right: Deer Tick performs co-headlining duties April 11 at the Diamond Ballroom in Oklahoma City. [PHOTOS BY NATHAN POPPE]

LOOKATOKC.COM

MAY 3–16, 2018

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MUSIC Q&A

MICHELLE ZAUNER

Mealing it in How Japanese Breakfast’s Michelle Zauner turned to food, music to cope with loss

BY NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC Editor

A

s a kid, Michelle Zauner defended the red squid tentacles packed in her school lunch box. Being half Korean was a constant struggle. The teasing was endless, and the probing questions about her heritage got old quickly. Zauner grew up in the Pacific Northwest in a very small and very white town without any Asian friends. She only felt Korean when it came to meals. You can listen to her music, but if you want to get to know Zauner best, then find her award-winning essay — “Real Life: Love, Loss, and Kimchi.” In it, she details the death of her mother in a narrative that not only inspired her to test family recipes but also paints an achingly raw portrait of the grieving process.

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“My dishes are never exactly like my mom’s, but that’s OK,” she wrote. “They’re still a delicious tribute. The more I learn, the closer I feel to her.” Zauner’s turning 29, and it’s a wonder she even has time to cook with how busy she is touring the world as Japanese Breakfast, supporting her sophomore record “Soft Sounds From Another Planet,” designing video games and directing increasingly ambitious music videos for herself and her friends’ bands. Her dreamy, synth-laden songs also are inspired by her mother’s passing. She actually started writing Japanese Breakfast tracks only weeks after her mother died of cancer. “When that happened, I was worried that if I allowed myself to fall into a deep depression, I wouldn’t have the ability to

Michelle Zauner’s previous band, Little Big League, dissolved shortly after the singersongwriter’s mother was diagnosed with cancer in 2014. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY EBRU YILDIZ]

SEE Q&A, 11

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MICHELLE ZAUNER

Q&A CONTINUED FROM 10 climb out of it ever,” she told LOOKatOKC on the phone. Her personal lyrics — especially the ones on her 2016 debut “Psychopomp” — are awash in shimmering arrangements that flex the power of pop music. She tells sensitive stories in a sunny way. That’s all in the face of a life full of speed bumps. “I have been playing music, making records and performing at live shows since I was 16,” she said. “I gave it a really solid go from ages 16-25, and I just kept getting spit out.” Sleeping on floors, getting fired from countless restaurant gigs and freaking out about unemployment gets old. But a combination of luck and great music vaulted Zauner out of obscurity and onto legitimate tours and a supportive push from indie powerhouse Dead Oceans.

Her band, Japanese Breakfast, recently made its first stop in Oklahoma to headline the first night of Norman Music Festival. Here’s a few highlights from my conversation with Zauner.

Q:

I loved your essay. Can you tell me how you wrote such a touching piece and its path to getting published? Zauner: I’ve always erred on the darker end of things. I’m a pretty sensitive person, and I get depressed easily. It’s something that I’ve fought against my entire life. I was scared of myself and my emotional health and how it might deteriorate after my mom passed away. ... The essay went through a lot of editing phases. The whole narrative was similar to “Psychopomp.” My essay wasn’t commissioned. It won a contest, but I don’t remember applying. I think it’s important for people to know this. When I had finished “Psychopomp.” I had sent it to 10 very small labels — not even Sub Pop, not

Michelle Zauner wrote the debut Japanese Breakfast album in the weeks after her mother died of cancer, thinking she would quit music entirely once it was done. [IMAGES PROVIDED]

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MUSIC Q&A

Matador, not Dead Oceans — and no one wanted to put it out. Same with the essay. I just sent it to every contest that didn’t have an entry fee and to every blog that I’d wanted to read it on. Every couple of months, a rejection letter would arrive. About nine months later, “Psychopomp” started doing really well, and around the same time Glamour magazine reached out and told me I won. I thought it was a scam.

Q:

Have you found any time to work on more nonfiction writing? Zauner: Yeah, I did take a month and a half off when I was living in Korea this last December. We did an Asian tour, and our last show was in Seoul. I stayed there for a month and a half to work on what I hope will be a book someday. It’s kind of an extension of the essay. ... I wrote maybe 100 pages, and a lot of it needs to be edited. At this point, we SEE Q&A, 12

Michelle Zauner’s sophomore album as Japanese Breakfast, “Soft Sounds From Another Planet,” is described as a transmutation of mourning, a reflection that turns back on the cosmos in search of healing.

MAY 3–16, 2018

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MUSIC Q&A

MICHELLE ZAUNER

Michelle Zauner, of Japanese Breakfast, enlisted help from co-producer Craig Hendrix (who also co-produced Little Big League’s debut) and Jorge Elbrecht (Ariel Pink, Tamaryn) to mix her sophomore effort, “Soft Sounds From Another Planet.” [PHOTO PROVIDED BY PHOBYMO]

Q&A

Q:

I have to ask you about making your own video game, “Japanese Breakquest.” Was that fun?

CONTINUED FROM 11 have a pretty full year of touring. There are some video projects I want to work on. I need to start thinking about a third record and writing that. The book might have to go on hold for a while.

Q: Your music videos are fun to watch.

Are they as satisfying creatively as, say, making an album?

Zauner: It’s totally different. I’ve been making records since I was 16 years old. I’ve learned so much. With any craft, at the beginning, you pick up a new medium and learn so quickly. You can see yourself taking these leaps of progress. If you’ve been doing something for a long time your progress is so much smaller. It’s really, really tiny steps of progress in music at this point. It’s satisfying to watch myself take enormous leaps. That’s where I’m at with directing.

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Zauner: You really moved through my arsenal of media. I swear I don’t have multiple personalities. ... I haven’t played it since it was released. How is it?

Q:

It was surprisingly detailed. I enjoyed collecting records and finding all the game’s Easter Eggs. Was that what you were hoping for? Zauner: Yeah! I actually designed that game with Elaine Fath. She did all of the actual coding. I was kinda like … in charge of approving the character design and coming up with the story, setting and the Easter Eggs. It was a fun project to work on with just one other woman. The budget was tiny. My husband, Peter Bradley, turned all the “Soft Sounds” album tacks into MIDI. I love the way it turned out. I hope that I get to do it again.

Q:

It sounds like you’re surrounded by people who inspire all these creative endeavors but how much of your output comes from pushing yourself? Zauner: I have always wanted to be a musician, but it’s such a difficult path and it’s so rare. I’m surrounded by brilliant, creative people and a lot of them never get to have the opportunity that I do. ... It’s just a really, really hard life and there’s a lot of rejection from people saying they hate you and your music. My whole life, my parents wanted to be supportive but they were also realistic. They encouraged me to not do music. Even today, people don’t believe what I’m doing is a career. It’s hard to be treated like I have the job of a teenager. It’s embarrassing. It wasn’t ever that I didn’t want to do it, but it was just everyone led me to believe it was not real that it was a complete fantasy to be a rock star. It sounds so stupid even saying this out loud. I think it wasn’t so much that people pushed me into it. I had these great opportunities come to me. ... I got really lucky after experiencing something really unlucky.

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MUSIC

KALE DUMAS

OKC’s Kale Dumas shares slick pop single

‘ON PAPER’ BY NATHAN POPPE | LOOKatOKC Editor

O

n paper, it makes sense Kale Dumas could be a pop star. At 20, the Oklahoma City-born musician has a long road ahead of him but give his first proper, studio-recorded single a listen. From the bubbly intro that channels the infectious first few seconds of “MMMBop” to Dumas’ John Mayer-esque delivery, “On Paper” is a solid pop introduction to the Oklahoma music landscape. The song officially landed April 20 but you stream it any time at NewsOK.com/ blogs/MiddleOfNowhere. “My roots are in a singer-songwriter, bluesy rock and folk background,” Dumas said. “I borrow things from the artists that inspire me. I’d like to make popular music and songs that everyone can enjoy. I’m envisioning playing all around the world.” His love song’s inspiration is a bit more local. Dumas sings about a long distance relationship and wanting to meet in the middle. Geographically, that’d be in Moore. Last summer, he was missing his high school sweetheart while she attended rush at the University of Oklahoma. For the first time, Dumas was faced with not living in the same city as his girlfriend. As freshmen, they had both attended OU. He’d relocated to Oklahoma City in 2017 while she continued studying in Norman. The couple have been friends since pre-kindergarten. Oklahoma City-born musician Kale Dumas has been writing songs since he was 14. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY RYAN CASS]

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“On Paper” single artwork. [IMAGE PROVIDED]

“It was originally a sadder song,” he said. “Even that short distance was tougher than I thought. It was about missing her, having questions about a relationship and wanting everything to work.” However, he knew studying journalism at OU wasn’t a good fit. It meant less time pursuing music. Dumas now attends ACM@UCO in downtown Oklahoma City and has gathered advice from the music college’s CEO Scott Booker, songwriter Travis Linville and guitarist Mitch Bell. After sitting on the song for a few months, Dumas teamed up with recording engineer Tyler Garcia at Edmond’s 33rd Street Studio to give “On Paper” a studio shine. “I learned a lot more about the studio process,” Dumas said. “We recruited great session players. It was just cool for a song — that I wrote every word for — to come to life like that.” Dumas has come along way since his father shared some Ed Sheeran songs with him a few years back, but he’s got work to do. This summer is when he estimates playing his first show. “I’m working on a body of songs that’ll represent me well,” he said. “A live show deserves a lot of preparation. I’m working toward a great set that ... shows I’m a performer and an entertainer.” And how dedicated is Dumas? “I’m in this to create longevity for my career and to die a legend,” he said. “I want a huge following locally, but I’m thinking globally for when my career’s over. “I want to do the impossible. I think I am the one in the million. Why not go for it?” Rock on.

MAY 3–16, 2018

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COVER STORY

ARTISTIC BALANCE

Artistic balance Marissa Raglin checks in as Skirvin artist in residence

Marissa Raglin works in the studio on the first floor of the Skirvin Hilton Hotel. [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL]

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May 3 - May 16, 2018

BY BRANDY MCDONNELL For LOOKatOKC

With a practiced hand, Marissa Raglin swiftly and steadily cuts a colorful bouquet away from a faded magazine page, using a sharp blade to carve away the excess paper between every petal and around every leaf. “In a digital age, I find it compelling to work with my hands,” she said. “Everything is hand-cut. A lot of time. It’s an average of between an hour to even three hours of cutting to remove a piece in its entirety.” When she’s finished, the Oklahoma City artist will toss the bouquet onto a long table under a wide window of the Skirvin Hilton Hotel, where it will mingle with many other cutouts, from a group of children playing dress-up and a plate of carefully arranged vegetables to a desert scene with towering cactuses and a woman modeling a once-fashionable pink gown. “I love the pastel hues that happen whenever the paper starts to kind of decay, and I just love that kind of challenge of working with vintage papers ... from books, magazines, postcards,” Raglin said. “My mom, on a weekly basis, will send things my way. My grandparents will pull things from estate sales; they love to do that. So, I like to think it’s a collaboration. My family is so important to me and is integral (with) them encouraging me to pursue the arts, getting a fine arts degree. They never once were like, ‘What are you going to do with that degree?’ ” Raglin actually has at least two jobs at the moment: In addition to her regular role as the director of museum experience for the Oklahoma Hall of Fame at the Gaylord-Pickens Museum, she started last fall her tenure as the 2017-18 artist in residence at the Skirvin Hilton Hotel, where she will be working through October in the airy studio in the northwest corner of the landmark hotel’s first floor. “Creating a new body of work, it’s been exciting to have so much natural light, so much kind of encouragement,” Raglin said, looking over the paper images scattered across the table. “I can space it out and see how things are interacting with each other. I know some collage artists that put like-minded items together, but I love the spontaneity of something interacting with one another that I maybe wouldn’t necessary expect.”

SEE ARTISTIC, PAGE 16 LOOKATOKC.COM


ARTISTIC BALANCE

COVER STORY

In a digital age, I find it compelling to work with my hands.” MA M ARI ARI RISS SSA RA RAG GL LIN IN, SK SKIR RV VIIN IN IN ART RTIIS ST AS ST AS RE ES SID IDE EN NCE CE

Art by Marissa Raglin, the 2017-18 Skirvin artist in residence, adorns the studio on the first floor of the Skirvin Hilton Hotel. [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL]

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May 3 - May 16, 2018

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COVER STORY

ARTISTIC BALANCE ARTISTIC, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 15 Making a SPACE Formally known as the Skirvin Paseo Artist Creativity Exposition, or SPACE, the residency is a partnership between the downtown hotel and the Paseo Arts Association, which handles the formal selection process. “I think every year it gets better and better, and we get really interesting applications. It’s never gonna be the same, it’s never gonna be boring, and it’s just a really fun opportunity,” Paseo Arts Association Executive Director Amanda Bleakley said. “Marissa’s work is really creative and thoughtful.” Raglin is the sixth artist to take part in the yearlong residency program, which along with studio space includes a monthly stipend, as well as complimentary meals and parking. Launched in 2012, SPACE is modeled after a program at the Pfister Hotel in Milwaukee, which, like the Skirvin, is owned by Marcus Hotels and Resorts. “We really love the arts and support the arts. That’s why we’ve got the studio here in the hotel ... so we can let our guests experience it, plus also local people in the downtown area can come by and experience the studio, as well,” said Don Jackson, the Skirvin’s director of sales and marketing. “Traditionally, most hotels just offer guest rooms, restaurant, bar and meeting space. But here with the added interest with the artist in residence, the guests if they choose to, can go in and participate, go by the studio and watch her put together a collage. It’s interactive, especially with her style of artwork.” Raglin has devised a simplified version of her artistic process so that visitors can create a collage postcard from reproductions of old photos of the Skirvin, vintage magazine images and templates of the OKC skyline. She scans each postcard, uploads it to an online catalog and then shares it via social media before sending guests off with their own work of art. More than 300 postcards have been made so far. “She’s a fantastic ambassador,” Bleakley said. “She’s got a lot of fun things going in her life and a great career in front of her. ... I’m looking forward to watching where she goes from here.” CREATING BALANCE

Art by Marissa Raglin, the 2017-18 Skirvin artist in residence, adorns the studio on the first floor of the Skirvin Hilton Hotel. [PHOTOS BY JIM BECKEL]

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May 3 - May 16, 2018

Face intent, Raglin uses a small foam brush to daub the matte medium she uses as glue on the back of a row of colorful birds that she carefully aligns with an array of retro kitchen appliances. “It’s about composition for me. I lean very heavily on design basics — unity, harmony, balance — trying to share a story, a unique narrative, using those elements,” she said. “I love from left to right how the color variations of the birds lead very quickly into the multiple appliances that the domesticated woman has. ... I love this idea of a free spirit kind of approaching something confined.”

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ARTISTIC BALANCE

COVER STORY

We really love the arts and support the arts. That’s why we’ve got the studio here in the hotel ... so we can let our guests experience it, plus also local people in the downtown area can come by and experience the studio, as well.” DON JACKSON, SKIRVIN DIRECTOR OF SALES AND MARKETING. Since trying collage about four years ago, the Louisiana native has found her artwork in demand, and she is preparing for a June solo exhibition at Mainsite Contemporary Art in Norman. The upcoming exhibit is one reason she applied for the Skirvin residency. “I knew I needed more space, honestly, for this solo show happening,” she said. “Space is critical to this medium ... and I love working with people.” When she learned she was a top-five finalist for the SPACE program, Raglin let her boss know about the opportunity. “She was like ‘This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity; you have to do it.’ From no moment was there any sort of hesitation. We work it out. I have a wonderful team that whenever I step out they are able to step in,” Raglin said. The Oklahoma Baptist University graduate works at least 20 hours a week in the Skirvin studio — usually in the afternoons, evenings and weekends — and balances it with her museum job developing programs and exhibits. She and her team at the Oklahoma Hall of Fame recently launched Spring Thing, a two-week series of free, family-friendly activities offered daily during spring break. In addition, Raglin was named this year one of three Spotlight artists for the Oklahoma Visual Arts Coalition’s “Momentum” exhibit for state artists 30 and younger. Her Spotlight project, a collage installation called “Nesting” that uses bird’s nests, bad apples and biological clocks to address people’s urge to ask women “When are you going to have children?,” is now on view at the University of Central Oklahoma’s Mitchell Education Center. Plus, she and the other Spotlight artists currently have an exhibition of their previous work on view at 21C Museum Hotel. Although she doesn’t have much free time, Raglin said she is enjoying balancing her many artistic endeavors. “I just said yes to everything this year,” she said, laughing as she picked up her knife again. “There’s kind of a resurgence of contemporary collage now, so artists who are working in this medium are sharing it as fine art. ... I like to think I’m painting with images.”

LOOKATOKC.COM

Marissa Raglin, an Oklahoma City artist who specializes in collage art, is the the 2018 Skirvin artist in residence for 201718. Through the fall, she is working in the studio on the first floor of the Skirvin Hilton Hotel. [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL]

May 3 - May 16, 2018

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FOOD NEWS

SCOTTIE’S DELI

Pastrami,dearest Scottie’s Deli offers ‘delicious things’ the old-fashioned way BY DAVE CATHEY For LOOKatOKC

W

hen Eric Fossett found his career in the energy industry on shaky ground, he didn’t panic, he opened a deli. That’s because fate isn’t always the bad guy. A geologist who specialized in seismology, Fossett grew up in a family supported by his grandfather’s small chain of sub sandwich shops. “During the summer, when my grandma was watching me, it was a treat to go there,” Fossett said. “I just loved being there and watching how the sandwiches were put together and how the food brought people together.” Today, Fossett owns Scottie’s Deli,

437 NW 23, serving scratch-made sandwiches, soups and salads in the blossoming Tower Theatre complex.

SHIFTING SANDS The direction of Fossett’s career path was dictated by influences at home, but they were divergent. He grew up in Northern California, where his grandfather opened a local chain of sandwich shops called Big John’s in the early 1970s. Big John’s was successful enough the family opened a number of locations, including one his parents ran. But Fossett’s mom spent plenty of time introducing him to the wonders of the planet. SEE DELI, 19

The Pork Pastrami sandwich is a new offering at Scottie’s Deli in Oklahoma City’s Uptown 23rd district. The deli opened last fall, bringing a traditional delicatessen to the Tower Theatre complex. [PHOTOS BY JIM BECKEL]

PAGE 18

MAY 3–16, 2018

LOOKATOKC.COM


SCOTTIE’S DELI

DELI CONTINUED FROM 18 “I grew up in Northern California, where my mom brought me (volcanic) ash from Mount St. Helen’s,” Fossett said. “She used to take me to Mount Lassen, an active volcano, to go hiking. She was really proactive about teaching me things about the planet.” Fast-forward to Fossett’s college years when, on a lark, he takes a geology class, goes on a hike with the class and shows enough acumen identifying rocks that it catches the professor’s attention. Even though Fossett would initially follow the path cleared by his mother, it would ultimately lead him to his grandfather’s legacy — but on his own terms. One of the benefits of being a working geologist was travel. Fossett lived in Houston and Las Vegas but spent much time in Los Angeles and San Francisco. The road eventually brought him here about four years ago, only to be swallowed up in the oil downturn. Instead of returning to the road, Fossett returned to the family business. “All the great cities I visited had great delis,” Fossett said. “After the oil downturn, I was looking around and there was all this progress, but no great deli.”

AMERICAN FOUNDATION The word delicatessen is fudged German, meaning, essentially, delicious things. But curing meats and producing cheeses isn’t confined to Germany. Italians have a pretty good track record, and the Jewish community has produced some of the country’s most famous delis. “I’ve taken inspiration from all those cultures,” Fossett said. “That’s why we call ourselves an American deli.” Named for the Scottish heritage his grandmother brought to the family

LOOKATOKC.COM

Scottie’s Deli owner Eric Fossett. [PHOTOS BY JIM BECKEL]

I F YO U G O Where: 427 NW 23 (Parking across the street). When: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday, and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday. Online: www.scottiesdeliokc.com. Call: 604-8940. Fresh cheeses from Scottie’s Deli in Oklahoma City’s Uptown 23rd district. with such pride, Scottie’s Deli opened last year. But Fossett’s work to bring it to life goes way back. “I am passionate about food and love to cook. When I was living in California, one of my favorite things to do was wake up Saturday morning and go to the farmers market and plan all the food I was going to make for the week with all the beautiful ingredients.” Scottie’s opened boasting the best pastrami in town and has since added an equally delicious duck pastrami. “We brine our pastrami and corned beef two to three weeks and smoke it in here,” Fossett said. To get that transcendent pastrami,

Fossett said his time in Texas played a role in the result. “People in Texas, and here, really love their barbecue, so when it came time to make the pastrami (which is made of brisket), I decided to put a little more smoke on it.” Fossett said he didn’t arrive at the final versions of his pastrami and corned beef over night. “I’d been working on corned beef for a couple of years,” he said. “I had the idea for the brine, and how long it needed for a while.” Turkey and roast beef are also smoked and roasted in house.

FOOD NEWS

“Pretty much everything but the Italian meats and cheeses are cured and made right here,” Fossett said. Five kinds of bread are baked daily, soups and salads are made each morning — even the dressings are original. So Scottie’s reputation, which is off to a great start, will ultimately stand on the merits of its own kitchen. With close to 20 choices to top a sandwich and more than a dozen kinds of cheese, you’ll be hard-pressed not to find a combination to satisfy your palate. But Fossett says ambition won’t let him rest. Last month, he added a half-dozen new options, including a sigh-worthy Pork Pastrami. I’ve also tried T’s Grilled Cheese. Sporting Horseradish Havarti, this is as good a fancy grilled cheese as you will find. Served with a Basque tomato soup Fossett calls “more of a garlic soup with a little tomato,” there is no shortage of flavor. The Big John, a monstrous collection of Italian cold cuts and cheeses, is an homage to Fossett’s grandfather. The APC combines house-made roast beef with caramelized onions, jalepeno and American cheese on garlic bread. Scottie’s boasts an outstanding matzoh ball soup made daily as well as chicken and sausage gumbo. A new patio was under construction during our visit. By the time warm temperatures finally get caught up with the calendar, it should be ready. Scottie’s also offers catering options and has partnered with the Tower Theatre to offer food options during events. Look for more of that as the entertainment district evolves. Perhaps the most crucial information I can pass along about Scottie’s is there is plenty of parking, it just happens to be in a free lot across the street. What you may not know, is the city has installed a protected crosswalk leading directly from that parking lot to the front door of the Tower Theatre. Scottie’s is next-door and has the sandwiches. If you drop in, tell Eric thanks for bringing a great deli to town but it’s fine to send earthquakes back home.

MAY 3–16, 2018

PAGE 19


CITY NEWS

B Y R O N ’ S L I Q U O R WA R E H O U S E

Blake Cody, general manager for Byron’s Liquor Warehouse, is about to expand his store’s extensive selection of beers with the addition of an 18-by-20-foot cooler allowed with a change in law this October. Cody and his staff are preparing an expansion and a new look for the liquor store, which has been at NW 23 and Broadway since his grandfather Byron Gambulos opened the business in 1959. [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL]

Expansion coming to Byron’s Byron Gambulos, shown in this 2006 photo, has turned over his 58-year-old store to grandson Blake Cody. [THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES]

PAGE 20

MAY 3–16, 2018

BY STEVE LACKMEYER For LOOKatOKC

Over the past 58 years Byron’s Liquor Warehouse has been the one constant at NW 23 and Broadway, a witness to the demise of Uptown as a thriving commercial corridor in the 1970s, the construction of giant elevated Interstate 235 above, and finally, a neighborhood revival. Now, the biggest change yet is set to occur at Byron’s where the store at 2322 N Broadway has a new boss and the store is about to be transformed inside and out.

“I feel I’m very lucky,” founder Byron Gambulos said. “There are very few people who can be around 58 years and now the store will carry on.” Byron’s owes its start to a historic vote on April 7, 1959, that ended Prohibition in Oklahoma. Those early days weren’t without controversy and enough violence against new merchants like Gambulos that the World War II veteran built an armorplated machine gun pill box above his store to put an end to firebombings and threats SEE BYRON’S, 21

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B Y R O N ’ S L I Q U O R WA R E H O U S E

CITY NEWS

Byron’s Liquor Store opened with the end of Prohibition in Oklahoma in 1959. Gambulos faced threats to the store, including firebombings, over his refusal to end discount pricing. In 1964, he added an armor-plated pill box on top of the store where snipers were posted to scare off any further attacks. [THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES]

The exterior of Byron’s has changed little over the decades as the store grew into one of the region’s largest liquor stores. A renovation will include expansion and a new facade. [THE OKLAHOMAN ARCHIVES]

BYRON’S CONTINUED FROM 20 to his business. More than a half-century later, another debate arose over rules established in that long-ago era that allowed sales only of full-strength beer without refrigeration at liquor stores and allowed other stores to sell refrigerated weaker 3.2-strength beer. Stephanie Bice, a freshman state senator, broke through years of deadlock on the restrictions, and voters were given a choice to change the rules and did so by overwhelming numbers.

MORE IN STORE With the changes set to go into effect in October, and under a new generation of leadership, customers are about to see a transformation of Byron’s both in its appearance, selection and operations. Blake Cody, Gambulos’ grandson, is making the store his own while Gambulos is spending most of his time at home with the true love of his life, wife Pat. “It started about six years ago,” Gambulos said.

LOOKATOKC.COM

“Blake asked to learn the business. I told him, ‘Your next few years will be the most miserable in your life. Either you will stay or you will say go to hell.’ And he stayed.” During those early years Cody started with cleaning the store and working all the different areas of the operation. He stayed and the transition in leadership started three years ago. “The law helped us make the decision to upgrade and get it into the new century,” Cody said. “It’s been a long time and it’s something I’ve been talking about with Byron for a few years now. The law helped push that along.” The first step was to acquire warehouses to the south of Byron’s that are being torn down to make way for an expansion of the store’s busy parking lot. That expansion will increase parking from 120 to 160 spaces.

MORE SPACE, MORE SPACES “Parking has been our Achilles heel,” Cody said. Work is also set to start inside the store, where Cody is adding an 18-door beer cooler that will be 18 feet long and 20 feet wide. The refrigeration, Cody said, will significantly expand the selections sold at Byron’s.

The next phase will be replacement of the roof and expansion of the store into a small strip of parking facing NW 23 that is often the source of traffic congestion for customers attempting to enter and exit from the street. With the new law going into effect, Wholesale Broadway Beer, which occupies a neighboring two-story building owned by Gambulos, will be shutting down. “Our plans are to use that for extra storage and then eventually as an event space,” Cody said. “We’re talking about a tasting place, one that would be nice for us to do our own events.” Since taking over Byron’s, Cody has taken an active role in promotion of the NW 23rd Uptown corridor. He is following the state’s negotiations with two groups hoping to buy the nearby 23rd Street Armory. Developer Chuck Wiggin is proposing housing, office and retail at the historic landmark while Coop Ale Works is proposing a brewery, hotel, restaurant and housing. “This corner has done well,” Cody said. “Since the ’40s and ’50s, being located near the capitol and downtown, it’s really built up. And in the last 20 years, you have all these districts really being revitalized with cool restaurants and bars coming in. It’s one of the hip spots to be in and we’re smack dab in the middle of it all.”

MAY 3–16, 2018

PAGE 21


CITY NEWS

RUSTIC CUFF

Unlikely road to company success Embarrassment leads to motivation for Rustic Cuff owner BY DAVID DISHMAN For LOOKatOKC

O

klahoma’s own Rustic Cuff jewelry is worn by celebrities around the world, but it took a scolding on the Oprah Winfrey Show to make it all possible. Jill Donovan had the opportunity of a lifetime when she was invited to appear on Oprah’s show to talk about her practice of regifting. Donovan had submitted an application online when she noticed Oprah was seeking regifters to appear on the show, and expected to share some fun stories regarding her regifting practices. But with the cameras rolling, Donovan faced harsh critiques from a panel of Oprah’s etiquette experts who told Donovan what she did was rude and tacky. Devastated, Donovan turned the disappointment into motivation. “What I thought was going to be a fun show turned out to be something embarrassing,” Donovan said. “After I was on the show, years passed and I decided I was going to move past the embarrassment. What happened on the Oprah show inspired me.” That inspiration led to the creation of Rustic Cuff jewelry. Donovan began crafting bracelets from a spare bedroom in her house. Working into the early hours of the morning, she crafted the jewelry as gifts for friends, family and loved ones. She didn’t sell them at first, just did so for the love of the process. Donovan didn’t even intend to turn it into a business.

PAGE 22

MAY 3–16, 2018

Left: Rustic Cuff owner and founder Jill Donovan visits the Classen Curve Rustic Cuff location on Feb. 27 in Oklahoma City. Above: Bracelets on display in the store. [PHOTOS BY STEVE SISNEY]

“I was never intending to be an entrepreneur,” Donovan said. “Because that to me meant work. I never knew work could be something you get to do instead of something you have to do.” Donovan is an attorney and was a professor at the time. What became Rustic Cuff was just a one-woman

operation. But demand for the product forced a change of plans. Word got out about the handmade jewelry, and soon Donovan was meeting people she’d never met before, who were interested in her products. She began selling the jewelry and hasn’t looked back. “I really think it was because I wasn’t focused and concentrating on sales,” Donovan said. “It truly was for fun for me.” Without a marketing budget, Donovan began sending Rustic Cuff gifts to celebrities. Donovan would take the time to personalize each gift in the hopes it would strike a chord with whoever would be receiving the Rustic Cuff, and they would be proud to wear it. One person she sent a gift to was Gayle King, one of Oprah’s best friends. Donovan loves watching King on television and thought it would be great to see her SEE JEWELRY, 23

LOOKATOKC.COM


RUSTIC CUFF

CITY NEWS

Displays are full of Rustic Cuff jewelry at the Classen Curve Rustic Cuff location in Oklahoma City on Feb. 27. [PHOTOS BY STEVE SISNEY]

JEWELRY CONTINUED FROM 22 wearing a Rustic Cuff product on TV. What she didn’t anticipate was what happened next. After sending King a collection of Rustic Cuff gifts, Donovan received a letter informing her Rustic Cuff would be appearing on the March 2015 cover of O, The Oprah Magazine — on Oprah’s wrist. The woman on whose show Donovan had been so embarrassed,

LOOKATOKC.COM

the one that effectively motivated her to launch Rustic Cuff, would now be wearing a piece of that jewelry. Not just any Rustic Cuff, but one Donovan had sent to King. “The irony of Oprah wearing a bracelet was a full circle moment for me,” Donovan said. “You don’t often get confirmation moments like that.” But where did Winfrey get the Rustic Cuff bracelet? There’s strong evidence it was regifted. “We weren’t selling it at the time; it was one we had made for Gayle King,” Donovan said. Donovan can’t worry too much about how Oprah

ended up wearing her product, as her business has exploded. Donovan was the lone employee when the company began in 2011. She hired her first employee in 2012. But now? Rustic Cuff employs 170 and retails from six showrooms, as well as online, for its products. Even with all the change, the mission stays the same. “When I first started, it was almost always making custom work,” Donovan said. “To me the heart of Rustic Cuff is the custom work we do for people. Anyone can make bracelets, but the meaning behind them ... that is what sets this apart.”

MAY 3–16, 2018

PAGE 23


T U M B L E W E E D CA L F F RY TO S E RV E U P CO U N T RY M U S I C

M AY 3 - 5 STILLWATER — Randy Rogers Band, Aaron Watson and Whiskey Myers are headlining the 27th Annual Tumbleweed Calf Fry Festival May 3-5 at the Tumbleweed Dance Hall, at Lakeview and Country Club roads. Along with the signature dish, the “testicle festival” will serve up a country music menu, including Luke Combs, Josh Abbott Band, Koe Wetzel, William Clark Green, Sam Riggs, Read Southall Band and more. General admission tickets are $80 for three-day passes or $36 for one night, while VIP tickets are $160 for three-day passes or $65 per night. New for this year, music fans can buy $100 three-day general admission tickets that include admission to the May 2 Bob Childers’ Gypsy Cafe songwriters festival taking place at three Stillwater venues: Eskimo Joe’s, George’s Stables and Stonewall Tavern. For tickets and information, go to www.calffryok.com.

Randy Rogers Band [PHOTO PROVIDED]

MUSIC M AY 2: U2, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 3: Rich Aucoin, The Root. 4: Rich Aucoin, Opolis. (Norman) 4: Wild Noise featuring Kyle Reid and the

Low Swingin’ Chariots, Oklahoma City Zoo. 4-5: Parker Millsap, Sooner Theatre. (Norman) 5: Wakeland, VZD’s. 5: Justin Timberlake, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 5: Priests, Opolis. (Norman) 5: Beach House, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 6: Annie Oakley, Blue Door. 8: Primus, Mastodon, Criterion. 9: Peelander-Z, Mercury Lounge. (Tulsa) 10: Peelander-Z, Opolis. (Norman) 10: Dr. Dog, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 10: Modest Mouse, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 11: Wild Noise featuring John Calvin Abney, Oklahoma City Zoo. 11: Papa Roach, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 12: Stone Sour, Diamond Ballroom. 12: Squirrel Nut Zippers, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 14: Fleet Foxes, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 14: Pentatonix, Zoo Amphitheatre. 16: Willie Nelson, Alison Krauss, BOK

PAGE 24

MAY 3–16, 2018

Center. (Tulsa) 16: Jimmy Eat World, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 17: The Sword, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 17: Spoon, The Jones Assembly. 18: Wild Noise featuring Beau Jennings and the Tigers, Oklahoma City Zoo. 19: The Toadies, Diamond Ballroom. 19: John Calvin Abney album release, Blue Door. 19: David Crosby and friends, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 20: The Hop Jam, Tulsa Arts District. (Tulsa) 24: American Aquarium, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 24: Travis Linville, Rose District Plaza. (Broken Arrow) 25: Wild Noise featuring Samantha Crain, Oklahoma City Zoo. 25: James Taylor, Bonnie Raitt, Chesapeake Energy Arena. 25: Penn and Teller, Riverwind Casino. (Norman) 25-27: Rocklahoma featuring A Perfect Circle, Godsmack, Poison, festival grounds. (Pryor) 26: The Melvins, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa)

27: The Melvins, Opolis. (Norman) 29: Depeche Mode, BOK Center. (Tulsa)

JUNE 1: Skating Polly, Opolis. (Norman) 1-2: George Strait, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 3: Big Head Todd and the Monsters, The

Jones Assembly. 4: Justin Townes Earle, Tower Theatre. 4: Minus the Bear, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 6: Buckethead, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 6: Creed Bratton, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 7: Styx, Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, Chesapeake Energy Arena. 7: Shinyribs, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 9: Beats & Bites featuring The Romantics, Riverwind Casino. (Norman) 10: John Fogerty, ZZ Top, Zoo Amphitheatre. 10: The Coathangers, LCG & the X, 89th St. 12: The Bacon Brothers, Tower Theatre. 17: The Eagles, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 22: Howie Mandel, Hard Rock Tulsa. (Catoosa) 22: Aaron Lewis, Riverwind Casino. (Norman) 22: Trevor Noah, WinStar World Casino.

(Thackerville) 30: Newsboys, CNB Center. (Enid) 30: Jerry Seinfeld, WinStar World Casino.

(Thackerville)

J U LY 1: The Pixies, The Jones Assembly. 2: Kesha, Zoo Amphitheatre. 7: Bill Maher, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 8: Paramore, Foster the People, Zoo

Amphitheatre. 9: Journey, Def Leppard, BOK Center.

(Tulsa) 12: Thirty Seconds to Mars, Zoo Amphitheatre. 14: Smashing Pumpkins, Chesapeake Energy Arena. 20: Modest Mouse, WinStar World Casino. (Thackerville) 20: Slaid Cleaves, Blue Door. 20: 3 Doors Down, Collective Soul, Soul Asylum, Zoo Amphitheatre. 28: Band of Horses, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 28: Riders in the Sky, Tower Theatre. 28: Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks, Vanguard. (Tulsa)

LOOKATOKC.COM


C I N C O D E M AYO | H I S T O R I C C A P I T O L H I L L

6 T O 9 P. M . M AY 4 Celebrate Cinco de Mayo with an authentic Mexican block party from 6 to 9 p.m. May 4, 2512 S Harvey. The Calle Dos Cinco festival will feature live entertainment by Conjunto SinLey, food trucks, community salsa tasting contest, a traditional Mexican dress show and more. Admission is free.

OKIE MADE MARKET | FILM ROW

1 0 A . M . T O 5 P. M . M AY 1 2 Okie Made Market featuring crafts, food wine and more is set for 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 12 in the Paramount Building parking lot, 701 W Sheridan in Film Row The outdoor event will feature vendors that carry products “made in Oklahoma,” including handmade decor, handmade furniture, handmade clothing, crafts, canned goods/ packaged foods, fresh vegetables, wine, art and many other items. Admission is free. Call 810-6977 or visit Okie Made Market on Facebook for information.

LOOKATOKC.COM

MAY 3–16, 2018

PAGE 25


2 0 1 8 O KC W H I T E WAT E R F E S T I VA L | B OAT H O U S E D I S T R I C T

M AY 1 9 - 2 0 Oklahoma City’s second annual Whitewater Festival May 19-20 in the Boathouse District will feature the full-contact sport of BoaterX (boatercross) where whitewater kayakers launch off the bridge at the east end of Riversport Rapids and race side-by-side through the channels. The event also will have the Slalom Survivor, a lighthearted whitewater kayaking competition that brings together the technical aspects of slalom racing with a playful format. Free white-water kayaking also will be available from nationallyrecognized paddlers, as well as a dog adoption event. Admission is free. Parking is $10. Go online to www.riversport okc.org or call 552-4040 for information.

V D U B S O N A U T O A L L E Y S T R E E T F E S T I VA L | A U T O M O B I L E A L L E Y

9 A . M . T O 4 P. M . M AY 1 2 Classic, vintage and new Volkswagens will line NW Eighth Street between Robinson and Oklahoma Avenues from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 12 in Oklahoma City’s Historic Automobile Alley District for the second annual VDubs on Auto Alley Street festival. Located just north of downtown along Broadway Avenue, the Historic Automobile Alley District was originally home to more than 50 car dealerships. Hosted by the VW Club of Oklahoma City, this free, family and pet-friendly street festival will include a car show, live music, art exhibits, pop-up park, VDub Love booth, and a Pente tournament. Go online to www.vwclubokc.org for information.

PAGE 26

MAY 3–16, 2018

LOOKATOKC.COM


C H I C K A S AW B R I C K T O W N B A L L PA R K | D O W N T O W N O KC

SHOTS

Round Rock’s David Ledbetter, left, and Oklahoma City’s Zach Neal, below, pitches during the Oklahoma City Dodgers home opener.

Oklahoma City’s Jake Peter misses the ball during the third inning.

[PHOTOS BY B RYAN TERRY, FOR LOOKATOKC]

LOOKATOKC.COM

MAY 3–16, 2018

PAGE 27


SHOTS

C H I C K A S AW B R I C K T O W N B A L L PA R K | D O W N T O W N O KC

Fans wait for the start of the Oklahoma City Dodgers home opener baseball game against the Round Rock Express at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark.

Oklahoma City’s Travis Taijeron chases down the ball in the second inning.

PAGE 28

MAY 3–16, 2018

Fans wait for the start of the Oklahoma City Dodgers home opener baseball game against the Round Rock Express at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark.

LOOKATOKC.COM


3 Ford Pickups that are 1970, $3,500 for all 3. 405-708-9121

2001 Town Car Sig. loaded 112K charcoal nice $4250 405-659-5531

1965 & 1968 Mustangs

2002 Highlander, 150K miles, recent major service, new tires, $4000 obo, 405-204-2792.

$11,000 for both. 405-708-9121 2012 Nissan Maxima SV auto, AC alloys, sunroof, loaded w/options, 72K mi, $8,200. 405-777-3069

2000 Porsche Boxstr convertible red, 124K miles. 405-478-0046 ‘ energize.coop 2013 BMW Li 7-Series 4Dr, Sedan, 2WD, 6-Cylinder, Automatic, White ext, Black int, Leather Interior, 39,350 mi, Excellent condition, always garaged, low mileage and service by BMW. Driver Assistance Package ($1,900) Lighting Package ($1,900) Alloy Multiple Spoke Wheels ($1,300) Executive Package $4,800) $25,700, 405-659-5806

TOP CASH

UP TO $10,000 FOR CARS

WE PAY MORE!!

Run/Not, Wrecked Free Tow 405-788-2222

CASH FOR CARS $200 and up. 405-512-7278.

2011 Impreza WRX, 113K, great condition, manual transmission, loaded, $11,499, 405-406-0237.

2011 SRX, luxury edition, NAV, roof, 2 owner, $14,700, 498-3777.

$155 & up for most non-running vehicles, no title ok, 405-819-6293

2012 Toy. Highlander Ltd. loaded, 93875 mi, warr $18,200. 376-1628

2007 Toyota 4Runner SR5, 4WD, nice, x-clean, $12,500, 498-3777.

'15 Dodge Ram with Hemi SB 2dr, silver, 1 owner, 18K mi, extended warranty, $21,000. 405-537-5468

Excellent condition $5500 2008 Limited Ed Suzuki XL7 Sport Utility, 2WD, 3.6L, Automatic, Lt Grey int, Leather Interior, great cond, 96500 mi, A/C, drv air bag, pass air bag, side air bag, DVD, fog lights, fold down rear seat, heated seats, int wipers, keyless entry, pwr seats, satellite radio, alarm, tinted glass, 3rd row seat, KBB value is $7K, priced to sell as I am heading to England.Vehicle runs great, everything works! $5500, 2S3DB717886105549 hankesj22@yahoo.com 571-212-2180

Boat,Motor,Trailier 2013 G3 17'2" Boat,2013 Yamaha 115 HP Outboard motor, 2013 Bear Boat Trailer. One Owner, Like New, Excellent condition. Low hours. $18,000 580-564-0544 2003 Cobalt 220 open bow, 375 hp exc cond, low hours, Cobalt trailer must sell, $27,500, 405-412-5575.

2010 Dodge Dakota Bighorn crew, loaded, x-clean, $11,300, 498-3777

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Golf Course Mechanic & Golf Course Worker

Lake Hefner Golf Club Must pass drug screen and have driver's license. Apply in person at 4491 S Lake Hefner Dr., Maintenance Shop. Email resume to: scottmallow@okcgolf.com 405-842-5986

NW Pediatric Dentist is seeking high energy, compassionate, intelligent individual for a

CHAIRSIDE ASSISTANT.

2007 Toyota Tacoma access cab, V6, 4WD, manual trans, 3" lift kit, 170K mi, $8200, 580-309-4155

Cars/Parts, Rain/Shine, 3 full days! May 10th, 11th, 12th, chickashaautoswapmeet.com 712 E Choctaw Ave, Chickasha. Vendor info: 405-224-6552.

Mt St Mary Catholic High School is accepting applications for a Head Girls Basketball Coach. Potential teaching positions are available. If interested, please fax cover letter and resume to 405-631-9209 or email tdenegri@mountstmary.org EOE

Medical Asst w/exp for growing practice in Choctaw. Must be able to draw blood. Great benefits. Email: nan13190@yahoo.com

AAA cash car, trk cycle. Run/notfree tow. Some $350+ 850-9696

Chickasha Swap Meet

Mt St Mary Catholic High School seeking the following positions for the 18-19 school year: Math (Algebra 1, Geometry), English and Yearbook. Please email Talita DeNegri at tdenegri@mountstmary.org or fax letter of interest/resume to 405-631-9209. EOE

2016 Dodge 2500 Laramie 4x4 low mi. Loaded 47,500 634-3565

'04 Century, 115K, all power, CD, good motor & trans, tag updated, 1 owner, orig. title, nice reliable car, runs great, $1,800. 312-4573

> CALL or TEXT 405-408-4835 <, $$ OKC top buyer of junk cars $$

16 foot dump bed with hoist & tank, good condition, needs paint, $3750 obo, 405-651-8248.

2008 Lexus RX350, 137K mi tan int, heated lthr seats, new tires, 4WD. Runs great $12,900 405-612-0006 or 405-372-8648

2006 Chevy Silverado ext cab, V6, new tires, $6150 obo, 512-3468.

2010 Lucerne, lady owned, 84K mi red, exc cond, $8000, 570-5284.

GET THE MOST CASH IN OKC FREE PICK UP

2001 Freightliner FL60 ext cab, auto, Cat diesel, a/c, 19 foot dump bed, non-CDL, 104K mi, $17,500 or trade, 405-651-8248.

2004 Harley-Davidson excellent condition, 7600 miles, chrome, acc $4,500 918-916-5627

Love for children and a positive personality is a must. Email resumes to OKCPEDO@aol.com or fax to 405-946-0687

2006 Monte Carlo LT, extra clean, leather, loaded, $5700, 498-3777.

C.N.A.s • LPN 3-11 shift

2015 Mustang 5.0, 6spd, 29K, exc. cond, $25,000. 405-990-1496

2007 Camry 58K mi. 3.5 litre

eng, 1owner $3000 405-529-6410

2011 Chevrolet Tahoe LT 2/W 109,066 Mi $16,900. 405-640-6444

2002 Fleetwood Bounder 36 Ft. Many new, extra, and updated features $21,000 405-329-8862

Benefits available. Apply in person Sommerset Neighborhood 1601 SW 119th St. 405-691-9221

May 3 - May 16, 2018

Page 29


Choctaw Global is seeking a LICENSED PSYCHOLOGIST

for a full time position at Guthrie Job Corps in Guthrie, OK. Psychologist must be licensed in OK with experience treating young adults. Psychologist will participate in intakes, recreational activities and events, conduct risk assessments. Psychologist will model appropriate behavior during social and recreational activities and will provide support to staff during programming. Hours are M-Th from 8-5. Please send resume to agordon@choctawglobal.com

Maintenance, Part Time, Simple remodel, electric and plumbing preferred. 2 years experience. Apply in person at Brookdale Bethany Assisted Living, 4101 N Council Road.

Aluminum Trailer Mfg. Hiring Aluminum Welders

Business is growing! Platinum Mfg. is looking for good aluminum Welders with trailer mfg. experience. Welding test will be required. Apply MondayThursday from 9:00 AM-3:30 PM, 400 S. Sara Road, Yukon 73099.

Class A or B CDL Mixer Drivers with air brakes, good MVR/drug test. An Oklahoma family owned business. 405-692-5247 or email srm4@soonerreadymix.com Truck Driver, Warehouse Duties

Immediate Hire! Hlth Ins, PTO.

Material deliv, med. duty truck, DOT medical card req. Warehouse & inventory mgmt. Heavy lifting req. Advancement potential. Self-motivated & organized. Fax or e-mail to: 405-702-4434 alex@geosolutionsinc.com

KITCHEN HELP 3-9 Tue-Sat Apply in person at: Ann's Chicken Fry House 4106 NW 39th, OKC

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300 LOTS GUN AUCTION Sat May 5 @ 11am Goldsby Community Bldg 164 E Center Rd Goldsby, OK see web page for details

YUKON, 2bd, 2ba, 2car, $650 mo + $500 dep, no pets, 405-209-4084. 160± ACRES OFFERED IN TRACTS * BUILDING TRACTS * BLACKTOP FRONTAGE 121 ACRES SELLING ABSOLUTE WITH NO RESERVE * OKARCHE AREA * KINGFISHER COUNTY

AUCTION

712 N Dillon, 3/1.5, 2 liv, ch&a, $695 mo + dep, Co., 740-1124.

653 N. Highway 81, Community National Bank Room, Okarche, OK

Thurs., May 10 at 10 AM LandBuzz.com 580-237-7174

Electrical Supplies * Vermeer Trencher/Backhoe * Trailer * Misc Items Enid OK

Online Only Auction Ends: Sun., May 13 at 5 PM

EquipBuzz.com 580-237-7174 Country Estate AUCTION Sat., May 5, at 10am, 721 Grigsby Rd., Newcastle, OK, tools, farm eq, boats, trucks, collectibles, & more * 405-902-5033 or www. facebook.com/power-auctions

NICE BRICK HOME AND 5± ACRES * FAIRVIEW, OK * SHOP BUILDING * HWY 8 FRONTAGE * RURAL WATER

AUCTION

4 BR 2,400 SF Norman 4bed, 2ba, 3 Car Garage, 2400SF $1,750 HOA pool, clubhouse; Avail May 2018; 703-585-0154

13579 HWY 8, Fairview, OK

Fri., May 11 at 10 AM LandBuzz.com 580-237-7174

5940 NW 40th. Large 2bd, $525 mo, $300 dep, no Sec 8 470-3535 HOME & 3 LOTS * CARMEN, OKLAHOMA * ALFALFA COUNTY E of OKC, pay out dn. Many choices mobile home ready. Call for maps TERMS 275-1695 www.paulmilburnacreages.com

160 acres NE of Lindsay, OK, 2 bed house, 3 wells, 1/2 farm land, 1/2 pasture, 405-756-5757.

215 N Central, Carmen, OK

Fri, May 11 at 3:00 PM LandBuzz.com 580-237-7174

CORNER LOT * FAIRMONT OK * HOME * SHOP * GARAGES

AUCTION

721 Main St, Fairmont, OK

Tues., May 8 at 10 AM LandBuzz.com 580-237-7174

Pd. wtr/garb. Near malls. 2 bed from $675 341-4813

Quail Creek newly remod 3000sf. 3bd 3.5ba 2liv w/FP, new stone counters, paint, carpet, & all LED lights $1850/mo 580-323-4040.

Furnished/Unfurnished. Bills Paid Unfurn 1 bed $169 wk, $660 mo; Unfurn 2 bed $189 wk, $780 mo; Furn 1 bed $179 wk, $680 mo; Furn 2 bed $199 wk, $820 mo; Deposits: 1 bed $150, 2 bed $200; $25 application fee paid at rental; Wes Chase Apartments, Elk Horn Apartments, Hillcrest (SW OKC), 370-1077.

Washer, Dryer, Freezer, Stove, Frig, $100 ea, can del, 820-8727.

Cedar wood panels, 6 feet high, 8 feet long, $43 each, 405-833-5439.

Sml 1bd 1ba Cottage, appls, fncd All Remod! $500mo 405-602-0412 PC North Area, 3 & 4 bed houses & duplexes available, 370-1077.

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

SAT. MAY 5TH »» 9:00 AM NO BUYERS PREMIUM!!! 891 KENT DR., CHOCTAW, OK (I-40 to Choctaw Rd. Exit, N 6 mi to NE 10th, E K mi to Kent Dr.) Expecting tractors & implements, hay baling equip, construction & shop equip, vehicles, trailers, mowers, 4 wheelers, golf carts, tools, fencing, misc. & more!!

New & Used. Financing available. 1233 SE 44th 405-632-8954

TISDELL'S AUCTION

27 YRS EXP 650-7667 HOMESOFOKCINC.COM

Mobile Home, 2bed, 2bath, w/ appls included + W&D, storage shed, Edmond Schools, No Pets 348-6240 or 623-1181

Chickasha ¡ small 2 bed 1 bath. some appls & furn! 405-274-2936

5634 NW EXPRESSWAY

LOOKATOKC.COM

Financing avail. 30day-5yr warr. $125&up 1233 SE 44th 632-8954

2 bd brick, 1 ba, 1 car, ch&a, nice, lease avail, $765 + dep, 201-6618.

2532 SW 28th, 3 bd, 1.5 ba, w/d hkup, $525 + $400 dep, 412-6881.

I BUY & SELL HOUSES

1009 Yuhoma Dr, Yukon, OK 73099. Saturday May 5, 2018, 9:17 AM House sells 10:07 AM 3 bedroom, 2 bath 1,560 sq feet, power tools, air compressor, furniture, appliances, & much more! Please see www. advancedauctionsolutions.com or call Rick Scrivner at 405919-2271 for more information.

Sheet Metal 3'x10' $17 ¡ Trim & Screws ¡ Mon-Sat ¡ 390-2077

TOP LOCATION!

Total Remodel 3/2/2! 2 liv. New bath, granite, SS appls. 2279sf, refinished wood floors. PC Schls. $229,900 Realty Experts 414-8753

Absolute Real Estate & Personal Property Auction

3 bed, 1.5 bath, section 8

welcome, $750/mo. 405-206-1217 3bd: 2122 Ray Ave $900/mo, 1500 McDonald Dr $750/mo ¡ 202-2635

ABSOLUTE AUCTION No Minimums - No Reserves

Selling Personal Book Collection 1st Editions, unclipped dust jackets, about 800 books, focus Southwest Americana. 580-352-4792 Ponca City

Warr Acres ‘ Great for retail office or Restaurant has drive thru window, vent hood, walk in freezer, private parking lot VERY BUSY AREA! 1400sf ‘ $2800mo 405-202-9900

57th/N May Crescent Park Apts Secure, HW floors. cer tile. Grt loc. ALL BILLS PAID! 840-7833

Putnam Heights Plaza

1 & 2 bed, newly remodeled, ch/a, 1830 NW 39th 524-5907

MWC For Rent/Sale. Nice homes $400/up. RV space $200 306-2576

Efficiency, Del City, no pets, all bills paid, $450/mo, 405-672-0877

405-769-5456 Weekday, 405-615-1306 Sale Day.

Consignment Auction Sat. May 5 10:00 AM

Santa Fe Furniture + 3 Desks & Decor Sale » 405-842-1129

4150 N. Hwy 74 Crescent, OK

JD 4840, AC 7080, JD 7700 Combine, Case 2590, Case 460 Trencher /Backhoe, Case 3394 FWA, Case 580 Extendahoe W/4-1 Bucket, Galion A55O Motor grader, '05 & '99 Bucket trucks, trailers, cattle eq., guns. DOUG WALKER 405-550-2068

dougwalkerauctions.com

800 N Meridian

1 & 2 Bedroom 946-9506

Travel Scooter for person w/ltd mobility. Red Pride Go-Go Sport 3 wheel scooter. Purchased new Nov 2017 for $1515. Used 6 wks Can be dissassembled for travel. Incl. new cover. Wt Cap 325lbs asking $1100 obo 405-478-1331 POWER WHEELCHAIR, like new, paid $3200, asking $1295, 405-607-0677

Isabella, Oklahoma

AUCTION

Complete Dispersal, Farm Equip CHI Tractors, Combines, Tillage, Cattle Equip, Trucks, Hay Equip

GREAT Office Space. Various NW locations, 300-6000sf 946-2516

Great NW Area w/View! 1bd/loft, carport, all appls, water paid, no pets/smoking $795+dep, 943-0053

216 Second St, Isabella, OK

Wed., May 9 at 10 AM

EquipBuzz.com 580-237-7174

Cub Cadet 46" Cut, 22HP Mower (44hrs use) Cub Cadet LT 46" 22HP Riding Mower XT1 Enduro w/ Kohler 7000 motor. 44 hrs use. $1699. OBO Call/Text 405-650-2893

May 3 - May 16, 2018

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FREON R12 WANTED:

2 black Sim bulls $1600ea or $3000/both 405-964-3732

Salsa mountain bike, full suspension $1295 obo 303-589-5809 OKC

1 bull 7 cows 2 calves $10,000 for all or sell separate 820-3862

Certified buyer will PAY CASH for cylinders & cans 312-291-9169 or

RefrigerantFinders.com

Ham radio equip. $3000, Camping equip. $100, 212cc Predator Chipper Shredder $300. Serious Inquires Only. 405-819-4311

Life Coaching 918-571-3030 Also Vision Board Classes

Like new 8'x10' metal building, $500 » » » 405-889-4274

5x8 » 5x10 » 6x10 » 6x12

w/gate ramps. 16' & 18' tandems $800-$1750 cash » 405-201-6820

Brittany 3 Yr Old Male Points & Backs/Medium Range Has hunted on wild & pen raised birds $1250 405-207-8322

New 5x10 trailer w/gate ramp, $825, 405-387-3051.

French Bulldog AKC 9 wks old M $2000 ¡‘¡ 580-243-7719

4x8 lawn mower trailer, $600. » » » 405-946-6291 AUSSIE DOODLE F-1 STANDARD puppies, 7wks, gorgeous low shed fur, Parents on Premises, s/w, $1,200. 405-226-0935 Aussiedoodles Registered, 2 yr guarantee, parents OFA & genetic test clearances 1300 & up 918-791-8800

Paying cash for: Diabetic Test

Strips: FreeStyle, OneTouch, & Accuchek, also CPAP/BIPAP Machines Also buying GOLD & SILVER: Jim 405-202-2527

F2 Savanna, 8wks, $2,500 price

Chihuahua Teacups, TEENY TINY, 1st shot, $350 cash 405-590-3229

Australian Shepherd ‘ Toy/Mini 2 black tri M, Reg. & guaranteed, $500. ¡‘¡ 580-504-0585

includes 1st vac's. 405-397-1199

Colt Ligtning Rifle 1888 32-20 Beautiful Colt Lightning Rifle cal 32-20 ca 1888 Wood is great with lots of Blue on receiver, Hx brl $2749.99 480-302-0777

C&J Sporting Goods

6604 NW 38th, 789-8102. Pistols. Rifles. Shotguns. In store sale. Great pricing. Best of the year. Thru Saturday.

Spring Golf Car Sale!!!! Large selection, gas & electric, 872-5671

May 3 - May 16, 2018

German Shepherd AKC Puppies 8 wks, 2F 1M, vet checked, s/w, great bloodlines $600. 580-272-7974

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC reg, vet checked, 2nd shots, POP, black & tan, $475, 405-313-1879.

GENETIC SUPERIOR BULLS

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French Bulldog Puppies AKC 3M, 11wks, vet chk, s/w, $2000, 918-407-5220 or 918-407-5221. stubbornbullies.com

For more profit! Red & Black. Low birth wts like Angus but more muscle & growth & better disposition. Most $2,400-$2,800. John Kusel Limousins ¡ 580-759-6038 29 nice black & black/white face bred cows, $1100 each, 405-401-9587. (21) Heifers, pasture exposed, 800-1000 pounds, $1,400 obo, Seminole, OK, 405-380-7406.

Boston Terrier AKC 7wks, shots, health guarantee $600. 405-694-3838 Boston Terriers AKC s/w/chipped hlt guar $500-$600, 405-434-0528 Boxer Pups White boxer pups 1m, 3f. 9wks S/W no papers $300 Text 405-278-1875

Cocker Spaniels, reg puppies, both parents on site, s/w, vet checked, $800-$1000, call now, 405-760-5300.

German Shepherd Pups AKC 3 females and 1 male, Puppy shots, wormed , 9 weeks old , healthy pups. $500. 580-606-3743

Dachshund Adorable long hair

Mini 2 cute - no shedding! $295$395 visa/mc ‘ 405-826-4557.

German Shepherds, AKC, world champion bloodlines from Germany, black & red, 4M, 1F, $3000, 405-795-1343 or 405-355-8996.

Dachshund pups, mini, pet homes only, $300, 405-892-7512.

German Shepherd, AKC Pup, 10 weeks old, excellent pedigree, 1 black F, $500, 405-712-2229.

LOOKATOKC.COM


YORKIE, AKC, 1 male, 7 weeks, s/w, adorable & playful, parents 5 pounds, $800, 405-485-2869.

Greyhounds-South African Parents imported. Loyal,loving, great hunters. 2 male,2 female. $500. 405-391-4007 (msg) , 949-291-8007 (text)

Rototilling, all yard work, scalping & more, all areas, 410-2684.

LABRADOODLES F1 Eight week F1 Labradoodle pups. 5F, 4M. Declawed, first shots and dewormed. Health Certificate and Health Guarantee. $600. Nate Dunford 580-819-3448 yacman23@gmail.com

English Bulldogs AKC 4 male, 3 female, 7 weeks old, 1st shots, vet checked, www. youngsenglishbullies.com $1500 580-504-0023

Lab AKC Yellow Pups 4 female and 3 male. AKC registered, 1st round shots, wormed, dew claws removed, with vet check. $600 Michael Lindley-(580)-399-2945 Tracy Lindley-(580)-399-2946 Lab Puppies Lab Pups AKC, 5 wks, S&W, POP, Strong hunting bloodlines. 4 black M, 1 Yellow M, 1 Choc F, 3 Yellow F. $600. Steve 405 615-9206

Morkies, adorable, ITTY BITTY!, $495, VISA/MC, 405-826-4557.

Pom/Lhasas 8wk s/w pad trnd $300 580-399-8230 405-380-2602

HYBRID WOLF CUBS 99% Blend Of Arctic, British Columbian and North American Timber Wolf. 2 Gray M & F, 10wks S/W. $500 405-650-4302

TOTAL CLEAN-UP Clean up, mow, tree/bush trim flower beds FREE EST. Lopez 405-830-8532

Maltese (ideal house pets) M & F, small, no shed, low allergy & odor, easy going, sweet & loving dogs, delivery/show room, $500-$1500, 918-694-3868.

Teacup & Mini Pigs, smallest you can get, adult breeders, rare colors $100-$200. 405-481-5558

A Plus Painting & Remodeling

35yrs exp. Free Est. 405-881-6036

Labradoodle Puppies, Quality Hypoallergenic, F1BB, CKC Reg., born 2/1/18 $1200 hlth guarantee microchip, UTD vet. 405-831-6754 Labradoodle Puppies 10 weeks old. $1200 (806)2204863; www.moxiedoodles.com Labs, AKC, Whites. Ready for Forever Loving Homes, 2nd shots vet wrmd $600ea 580-759-9500 buckaroosrr.com

Pomeranian puppy 2f 1m ACA reg. s/w Enid $650 580-541-7587

Pom Pups: 2M, white, cream, 1st s/w, $350 each, 580-467-8679 » 580-606-7162

Want to Buy: Do you own a TB Mare sired by Wild Bill? Please call 321-266-6940 or 4914 Buttonwood Drive, Melbourne, FL 32940

Fitzpatrick Painting, 34 yrs exp, free est, lic, ins, 405-446-9882. Appliance & A/C Service, 27 years exper, $40 service call, 371-3049.

POODLE 1 year old Toy

white w/apricot shading. Male proven breeder $900 580-374-2968

PATIO COVERS, CARPORTS, CONCRETE WORK (405)740-9097 www.PhilReimer.com

2 Car Carports & Patio Covers Free Estimates. 694-6109

LABS AKC PUPPIES White $500 Chocolate $300 580-841-0841 Lhasa Poms 8wk s/w Hse trnd $300 580-399-8230 405-380-2602

BUDDY'S PLUMBING, INC.

Ask about our camera special. 528-7733, buddysplumbingok.com

TIPTONSPLUMBING.COM No Job Too Large Or Too Small Call Zach - (405) 703-2700

POODLES, AKC, Teacup, Tiny Toy & Toy, $1,000-$2,500. 405-481-5558

Drives, Patios, All Types,

Lic./Bond./Ins. Free Est. 769-3094

Poodles, Standard, AKC, 8 weeks, white to apricot, s/w/t/dc, $600-$900, 405-496-7552. Poodles, tiny toy/toy, colors, reg, vet ck, $650-$1000, 405-326-5191

Terry Ralls Concrete Lic bond Ins. 20+yrs no job too small 473-8334

Schnauzer AKC 2F 2M $650-$700 405-408-6645 Schnauzer Mini AKC s/w/chipped hlt guar $500-$600, 405-434-0528

SHEPHERD CONCRETE, Free Est, Licensed, Bonded, Ins, 520-4426.

Yes, you can prosper. Call 1-641-715-3589, access 949458# Call #638 www.flp23.com/jgc Schnauzers, registered, toy & mini, M&F, cute as a button, raised in our home, (FB--Rhinestone Schnauzers) taking deposits, $1200-$1600, Lorie, 580-210-9127. Schnauzer Toy Puppies AKC, ears & tail cropped, m-chip, guarantee, vaccinations, wormed, females, $600, 405-404-7069.

ROOFING & REPAIRS, Free Est. Ins. lic 80120 722-2226/640-1144

QUALITY FENCE COMPANY FREE ESTIMATES

»GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100.

on new & repair, 405-317-0474.

L&R Tree Service, Low Prices,

Ins, Free Est, Firewood, 946-3369.

Home Repair & Remodel. Roofing. Siding. Free Estimate. 410-2495.

L&R Tree Service, Low Prices,

Ins, Free Est, Firewood, 946-3369.

Siberian Huskies 9M 2F 4mos old. $200 -$500 405.802.4415 txt 405.796.0899 ‘ leave msg. debbiesdreamhuskies.com

YORKIE, ACA, Adorable Pups, 2M, 2F, s/w, $800-$1,000. 405-570-9134 or 405-570-5274

LOOKATOKC.COM

RESIDENTIAL HAULING AND CLEANING, 765-8843.

Pro Tree Service - 1/2 off Seniors Free stump removal. 314-1313.

May 3 - May 16, 2018

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