LOCAL ENTERTAINMENT AND NEWS FOR PEOPLE WHO PAY ATTENTION
MARCH 9 – MARCH 22 2017 • VOL. 13 • ISSUE 5 LOOKATOKC.COM
MIKE check Oklahoma’s one-man band Mike Hosty delivers 16th album PAGE 18 TOWER THEATRE OPENS DOORS PAGE 14
| HORSE THIEF FACES THEFT PAGE 22
from the top
LOOKatOKC 8 | You go, girl This 16-year-old Okie has been running a business from the time she was a little girl. Jack Money talked to Margo Gianos about her successful company she runs out of her home.
16 | Sister, sister Annie Oakley alters perspectives on new song and mini EP. Nathan Poppe shares his Q&A with the folky twin singers, Grace and Sophia Babb.
12 | Seeing red Brandy McDonnell explores the National Cowboy Museum’s new exhibit “A Yard of Turkey Red” and how it honors the Western bandanna. 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
Check out our online home at newsok.com/entertainment/lookatokc Go to facebook.com/LOOkatOKC and become a fan.
Nancy Simoneau (405) 475-3708 NICHE PUBLICATIONS EDITOR Melissa Howell ART DIRECTOR Todd Pendleton PHOTOGRAPHER Steven Maupin COVER PHOTO Chris Landsberger
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 are accurate. 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.
F O L L O W @ N AT H A N P O P P E O N T W I T T E R
FROM THE EDITOR
NATHAN POPPE LOOKATOKC EDITOR NPOPPE@OKLAHOMAN.COM
A
building-sized Woody Guthrie is tough to ignore. If you didn’t see photos of Jack Fowler’s artwork projected on the Oklahoma Capitol recently then you aren’t following people who are unhappy with the political landscape of our state. Here’s a quick recap in case you missed it. On Feb. 27, Fowler teamed up with Stephen Tyler to project an iconic, enormous image of Guthrie against a white construction tarp hanging on the Capitol. The artist reached out to followers asking what phrase they’d like projected onto Guthrie’s guitar in the future. When Fowler returned, the power was cut to a nearby outlet. When he retaliated with a generator, Highway Patrol cars arrived and foiled the project. This all happened during a stretch of a few evenings. Authorities cited the projection as a safety risk. At the end of the day, Fowler and Co. just weren’t welcome to protest in such a fashion. The idea was flashy and impressive, but I don’t think anyone expected it to be a sustainable protest. Either way, one thing stuck out to me: Dissent is a tricky business. Going against the grain is something Guthrie understood very well. As Paste Magazine pointed out in a 2013 review of the “American Radical Patriot” collection: “No artist — not Dylan, Joe Strummer, Michael Franti, Bob Marley, Billy Bragg or Phil Ochs — has ever expressed a deeper will to fight against oppression and the rights of ‘the little guy’ than
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Woody Guthrie.” Scratch beyond the surface of Guthrie, and you’ll learn he wasn’t always thrilled with the U.S. His omnipresent “This Land Is Your Land” track was a social commentary sparked by his irritation with Kate Smith’s rendition of “God Bless America.” I don’t think Guthrie hated his country. Rather, I believe he disliked what he saw happening to it and how it was being represented. So, he crafted hundreds and hundreds of tracks, worked alongside the U.S. government on songwriting projects and cemented a legacy that’s unparalleled, even to this day. There’s a reason we’re talking about the Okemah-born songwriter 100 years after he was born. He created in a way that was sustainable and his message continues to get amplified through places like the Woody Guthrie Center and even Fowler’s artwork. I happen to own a piece of his artwork, too. One fact remains comforting after Fowler’s protest. There’s a painting of Guthrie hanging inside the Oklahoma Capitol already. It’s currently in storage, but will likely return after renovations. I hope that painting stays there forever just like I hope Fowler’s work finds another avenue and it sparks people to speak their mind in a constructive manner. We’re all looking for comfort. It’s just a bumpy road to get there.
In this Feb. 27 photo provided by Heide Brandes, an image of folks singer Woody Guthrie is projected on tarps at the Oklahoma Capitol in Oklahoma City. Oklahoma City artist Jack Fowler says he projected an image the iconic singer in an effort to get people to “shake up the powers that be.” The Oklahoma Office of Management and Enterprise Services said in a statement that the projection is prohibited due to safety concerns for crews working at night on a restoration project at the Capitol. [HEIDE BRANDES VIA AP]
Woody Guthrie. [PHOTO PROVIDED]
LOOKATOKC.COM
CITY NEWS
AU TO M O B I L E A L L E Y
GATEWAY LIVING
The Condominiums on Broadway at NW 6 and Broadway will include neon lighting to match neon signage throughout Automobile Alley. [BOCKUS PAYNE ASSOCIATES]
Upscale condos planned for Automobile Alley BY STEVE LACKMEYER For LOOKatOKC
N
ick Preftakes, who pioneered downtown housing more than 20 years ago, is set to build the first new for-sale condominiums at a key gateway to Automobile Alley and downtown. The Broadway Condominiums, set to open in mid-2018, would be the first residential offering to be built along Automobile Alley since the pioneer homes of 1889. The $12 million project will be built on what is currently a surface parking lot at NW 6 and Broadway.
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The project is being developed by Preftakes, who along with Mark Ruffin developed The Garage Lofts at NW 13 and Broadway in 1995. Preftakes also redeveloped Oklahoma City office buildings in the late 1990s. He has built urban housing in other states, but this will be his first residential project in downtown Oklahoma City. The five-story building is being designed by Bockus Payne Associates. Architect Bruce Bockus said the building’s design strikes a balance between modern convenience and Broadway’s history aesthetic. “The location of the Broadway Condominiums SEE CONDOS, 7
The $12 million Condominiums on Broadway will be built on what is now a surface parking lot at NW 6 and Broadway. [PHOTO BY STEVE LACKMEYER]
LOOKATOKC.COM
AU TO M O B I L E A L L E Y
CONDOS CONTINUED FROM 6 positions the project as the southern gateway linking Automobile Alley with the Central Business District,” Payne said. “It was critical for the design to honor the history of its unique context while at the same time serving as a gateway to the exciting transformation of our incredible city’s core.” Preftakes presented the plans recently to the Automobile Alley board of directors. He is seeking the board's endorsement before the project is submitted to the Downtown Design Review Committee. Preftakes is expecting questions about the use of the first floor. Parking will be on the ground floor behind a street-level facade of window display cases that will showcase work from local artists and promotions
from community organizations. Collin Fleck, project architect, said neon accents will be featured on the exterior to fit in with the neon signage that can be found throughout Automobile Alley. “The majority of the structure will be characterized by the brick aesthetic for which Automobile Alley is known,” Fleck said. “The focal feature will be a contemporary composition of architectural metal and glass carved out of the building’s corner to distinguish the modern era of its inception and to highlight the building’s unbeatable downtown views.”
IN THE CENTER OF IT ALL Preftakes said the project is targeted at those who crave a vibrant city lifestyle and want to be in the center of it all with walkability to local restaurants and access to the future streetcar. With a southfacing terrace, expansive windows and 12-foot-high
CITY NEWS
ceilings, each unit will offer skyline views. The development was inspired by talks between Preftakes and friends about shaking up their living arrangements now that kids are grown. “My wife and I were talking with friends, interested in an ‘urban lock-and-leave’ home that required less maintenance, with close proximity to our burgeoning downtown,” Preftakes said. “But that didn’t exist. So we are creating it.” The 12 condominiums, ranging from 1,600 to 3,300 square feet, will sell at between $600,000 and $1.5 million. The residences will be offered for sale through Wendy Chong with ReMax Preferred Properties. “This is a real stretch for Oklahoma City,” Preftakes said. “It’s an expensive building. There are not two-byfours in it, no stucco. It’s a small footprint with no economies of scale. It’s serious. I don’t know if there is a market, but I believe there is a market.”
The five-story Condominiums on Broadway will include ground floor parking that will be fronted by display case windows dedicated to local artists and community organizations. [BOCKUS PAYNE ASSOCIATES]
LOOKATOKC.COM
MARCH 9–22, 2017
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CITY NEWS
H O N E S T LY M A R G O
BALMY BUSINESS Local teen successfully launches business from her home BY JACK MONEY For LOOKatOKC
M
argo Gianos is honestly original. Like other 16-year-olds, she’s focused on school, her athletics, social media, good television shows, her friends and her family. But unlike most girls her age, she has her own company — one that’s really successful. Honestly Margo produces and sells a line of all-natural lip and body balms, certified organic balms and a vapor balm. So far, Honestly Margo’s products are sold in about 400 locations in the U.S., Canada and Australia. Its products also are featured on the Grommet website, and a show about Margo and two other young, successful entrepreneurs recently appeared on The Learning Channel. Margo, of Oklahoma City, said she’s been interested in having her own business since when she began making cat toys at home and selling them in her front yard. “I was always coming up with different things to make and sell,” she said. “I would, not that I needed to, but because it was fun. I got a thrill out of it. It was exciting for me.” Margo said she became interested in beauty products when she turned 11. “I couldn’t wear makeup, though,” Margo said. “That is when I was like, OK, lip balm sounds like a good idea. It sounds like something that I can wear. So that’s when I decided to start trying to come up with my formula.” So, she and her mom, Irene Gianos, got to work in the family kitchen. On the company’s website, Margo explains that she and her mom worked together to find the best natural ingredients for the project. After sharing the balm with her friends, Margo said they wanted more — lots more — and when her mom told her they could turn it into something special, she was all in. SEE MARGO, 9
Margo Gianos shows some of the products sold by her company, Honestly Margo. [PHOTO BY CHRIS LANDSBERGER]
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MARCH 9–22, 2017
LOOKATOKC.COM
H O N E S T LY M A R G O
CITY NEWS
ONLINE
Honestly Margo sells lip balms, tinted lip balms, body balms and a vapor balm through its website, through the Grommet website and at hundreds of retailers in the U.S., Canada and Australia.
Visit NewsOK to see an interview with Margo Gianos conducted by Business Writer Jack Money. Visit honestlymargo.com to learn more about Margo Gianos and the company’s products. Visit tlc.com and enter “Kid Tycoons” to see The Learning Channel’s show about Margo Gianos and other young entrepreneurs.
[PHOTO BY CHRIS LANDSBERGER]
MARGO CONTINUED FROM 8 “Three months later, Honestly Margo was born,” Margo said.
‘JUST THE BEGINNING’ On the website, Margo said Honestly Margo brings together two things she loves, starting her own business and beauty. “This endeavor represents my first adventure into business, but it’s just the beginning,” she continued. “I think my products represent girls of today. Girls are smarter than ever before, and we’re taking the things we’ve been given and mixing them together in new and better ways. Honestly Margo is about pure ingredients, but it’s also about dreaming big, and taking a chance.” The first retailer to carry Honestly Margo’s products was Cayman’s Clothiers Inc. in Norman, a business owned by a woman entrepreneur who inspired Margo, Irene Gianos said. “She could see a bit of that in her, that drive, and was totally on board, wanting to support her,” Irene Gianos said. Honestly Margo’s products began
LOOKATOKC.COM
getting picked up by other retailers, its growth aided by social media campaigns on various platforms. Getting products onto the Grommet website also was a huge boost, both Margo and Irene Gianos said. The site launches undiscovered products that have a purpose and are invented by people with stories, language on the Grommet website reads. Margo said having her products featured on the Grommet website is “a crowning jewel that shines brightly, assuring me that I am on the right path.” Irene Gianos added the social media efforts of Honestly Margo and the company’s website also are vital in maintaining momentum. The site features not only Honestly Margo’s products, but also introduces Margo to her customers. “We can reach people globally,” Irene Gianos said. “It is free. It tells a better story. It is visual. Customers can see her, the product, and get a chance to know her. It paints a story.” Honestly Margo’s products are produced in the United States, and she and her mom continue to visit regularly about the enterprise, both said. “I am planning on expanding its retail distribution and also coming out with new products very soon,” Margo said.
MARCH 9–22, 2017
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F O O D F E AT U R E
OFF THE HOOK
Corey and Loniesha Harris have grown their food truck into a full-scale restaurant BY DAVE CATHEY For LOOKatOKC
O
OFF THE HOOK IS JUST THAT Chef Corey Harris makes Smothered Seafood Fries on Feb. 15 at Off the Hook Seafood and More in Oklahoma City.
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MARCH 9–22, 2017
ff the Hook isn’t cutting bait, but the popular fast-casual seafood concept soon will be casting its line into larger waters. What started as a notion from a player on Oklahoma City’s first NBA team is now a favorite haunt of its current team, according to the photos on the wall-of-fame around the corner from the register. The popular fast-casual concept started in a truck, graduated into a small restaurant and is now on the precipice of going full-service. First things first, for the unannointed, Off the Hook is the playground of chef Corey Harris and his wife, Loniesha. Harris said he grew up in a family where food and cooking was held in reverence, and after knocking around in odd jobs committed himself to the School of Culinary Arts at Platt College. That led to a job at the Ford Center, now Chesapeake Energy Arena, when Loniesha said a member of the New Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets was so impressed with her husband’s skills that he said they should start a food truck together. The Hornets left town, but the inspiration remained. “That ended up falling through,” Loniesha Tempson-Harris said. “So we ended up doing it ourselves.” But not before they saved some money — Corey, as an instructor at Platt College where he graduated, and Loniesha, selling real estate. Loniesha, who you’ll usually find wearing a T-shirt with “Boss Lady” emblazoned across the shoulders, said when they got the truck up and running in 2013, they planned to operate it on weekends only. But within six months, the trajectory changed. “Everywhere that we went, we had a line that was stacked up,” Loniesha said. “People would drive from all over to eat with us, pretty soon they were saying, ‘You all need a restaurant, we’re tired of chasing the truck.’ “ So they did. “We lived around the corner, and I actually came over here to eat and it was closed. It had a ‘closed’ sign, and everything was inside,”
Co-owner Loniesha Tempson-Harris stands behind the counter Feb. 15 at Off the Hook Seafood and More. [PHOTOS BY NATE BILLINGS] Loniesha said. “Ever since then I started stalking the restaurant.” She said once the “for lease” sign went up, they pounced.
‘GAME-CHANGER’ But Off the Hook has outgrown the former coffee shop and Korean taco joint it occupies. The Harrises are poised to take over a vacant space on S Meridian in the spring, though no deal has yet been finalized. If that deal does come to fruition, Corey Harris said the menu will have one major change. “A bar,” Harris said. “We’re going to try to experiment with some frozen margaritas and some local beers.” The other thing it will have is plenty of room to relax and enjoy those drinks. “I’d say it’s at least three times larger than this place,” Harris said. “It’ll be a game-changer for sure.” He also said he’ll be looking for live musicians and customers seeking a place to kick back and enjoy it with comfort food and a few cold ones. Off the Hook is only open until 4 p.m., so if you want a big batch of Corey’s gumbo, you’ll need to call it in for pickup. Loniesha said they only accept carryout orders of $50 or more, but that’s a cinch with the variety of this menu. I’ve eaten at Off the Hook a number of times and found the catfish filet crisp, flaky and SEE CHEF, 11
LOOKATOKC.COM
OFF THE HOOK
F O O D F E AT U R E
TOP LEFT: Grilled Jerk Chicken Kabobs are one of the items on the menu at Off the Hook Seafood and More. TOP RIGHT: Food Editor Dave Cathey recommends these crispy Seafood Wonton. BOTTOM LEFT: Corey says the heavyweight champ of his menu is the Smothered Seafood Fries. BOTTOM RIGHT: One of the most striking — and cheapest — things on the menu are the Kool-aid pickles. [PHOTOS BY NATE BILLINGS]
CHEF CONTINUED FROM 10 delicious. The Cajun Butter Frog’s Legs are succulent and spicy. My personal favorite incarnation of the dish. The gumbo has plenty of file flavor and the soulcoddling warmth the dish evokes in our imagination. The Po’ Boys come in blackened chicken, crawfish and soft-shell crab, which gives you three different reasons to drop in for lunch. Entrees revolve around
LOOKATOKC.COM
fried shrimp and fish plus oven-roasted chicken. But Corey says the heavyweight champ of his menu is the Smothered Seafood Fries. “One day I was doing a catering on the truck, and I had some lobster cream sauce and I had some fries. I dipped the fries into the sauce, and it was delicious,” Corey said. “So over time I just started adding more stuff like cheese, fried onion and bacon — now it’s our No. 1 seller.” He also said the secret weapon on his menu is the Jerk Chicken Kabobs, which consists of chicken marinated in a house-made sauce and fresh vegetables chargrilled and served hot on skewer.
“It takes about 10 minutes, but folks who’ve ordered it know it’s worth the wait,” Harris said. Don’t sleep on the Seafood Wontons either. This mixture of red onion, chili sauce, lump crab, shrimp, crawfish, garlic and cream cheese. Perhaps the most striking thing on the menu is the cheapest: Kool-Aid pickles. Selling for $1, these fat dill pickle halves are exactly what they sound like: pickles marinated in Kool-Aid. I recommend the Green Apple. Off the Hook is open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. To make orders for Fat Tuesday, call 840-3474.
MARCH 9–22, 2017
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M U S I C F E AT U R E
T O W E R T H E AT R E
TOWER POWER I
t finally happened. After years of sitting dormant, the Tower Theatre returned with a exciting debut. I’m sad to say that I was out of town for the event. I live across the street from the venue and have been eagerly awaiting my neighbor’s inaugural concert. A special thanks to Bryan Terry for visiting the show and snapping these excellent images. Here’s to another opportunity for Oklahoma music and a congratulations to the Okie hip-hop talent that kicked things off in style. — Nathan Poppe, LOOKatOKC editor People listen during a concert for the grand opening of the Tower Theatre. TOP PHOTO: A crowd fills the floor during the concert. [PHOTOS BY BRYAN TERRY]
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MARCH 9–22, 2017
LOOKATOKC.COM
T O W E R T H E AT R E
M U S I C F E AT U R E
ABOVE: People watch Grand National perform during a concert for the grand opening of the Tower Theatre. LEFT: DJ Reaper performs at Tower Theatre.
Jabee poses for a photo with Linda Koester, left, and Cathy Story before the concert.
A crowd gathers outside the Tower Theatre.
LOOKATOKC.COM
MARCH 9–22, 2017
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M U S I C F E AT U R E
HORSE THIEF
Horse theft
From left, Horse Thief is Alex Coleman, Zach Zeller, Cameron Neal, Cody Fowler and Alberto Roubert. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY DANIEL MUDLIAR]
OKC band overcomes own ‘Trials & Truths’ on road to new album BY NATHAN POPPE | LOOKatOKC Editor Actual thieves would’ve stolen Horse Thief’s instruments if the band wasn’t onstage using them. In December, the Oklahoma City band was devastated after their tour van was broken into during a stop in Portland, Oregon. The quintet lost a safe, along with passports, iPads, computers, clothes and roughly $4,000 in sold merchandise. Horse Thief frontman Cameron Neal was at a complete loss. As were his bandmates Cody Fowler
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MARCH 9–22, 2017
(bass), Alex Coleman (guitar, keys), Alberto Roubert (drums, percussion) and Zach Zeller (guitar, keys). “We were debating, do we just drive home? Do we finish our three shows? Do we call it quits?” Neal told LOOKatOKC. “We kept going, and the big reason was because people bought tickets to the shows.” This is the moment where a lot of people would call it quits. But at 2 a.m., Neal returned to his hotel room, hopped online and shared what happened
via the crowdsourcing website GoFundMe. “The main reason we decided to ask for help was because we had no other choice. ... All that money was going to pay off the tour we were just on,” Neal said. “We were about to leave for Europe. To go to Europe, it’d cost you $1,200 to replace all your passports.” Two days later, the band received nearly $8,000 in donations from friends, musicians and music SEE Q&A, 15
LOOKATOKC.COM
HORSE THIEF
Q&A CONTINUED FROM 14 enthusiasts. “For us, I think it was an eye opener,” Neal said. “There’s people that really care about the music and really care about this band. The least that we can do is to keep it going.” On Jan. 27, Horse Thief released a new LP called “Trials & Truths” via Bella Union. I sat down with Neal to discuss the fresh sophomore album, the rocky road to its creation and starting work on a third record at Blackwatch Studios.
Q: A sophomore record can be over-
whelming for a lot of reasons. What is like tackling that on “Trials & Truths?” Cameron Neal: One of the main reasons we named it “Trials & Truths” was because it wasn’t the easiest road. Basically, once we fished recording, we learned a lot because we messed up a ton of things. ... We were trying to be a lot more specific about what we wanted as a band. I think it was hard to focus on that when we were traveling so much. It’s a really good album to describe where we were at that time. ... I think it was hard for everybody in the band financially. There’s also relationships back at home and things like that. I think it was the first time we all had to step back and figure out how we were going to really do this.
Q:
When did you settle on that album title? Neal: We settled on a name last summer. It was fully done. For me, I like that idea of looking back and making records that act as a snapshot. It doesn’t have to relate to things five years down the road. ... That’s the coolest thing about looking at bands that have 10 albums. You go to their first three albums, and they sound almost nothing like their newest albums. You can get a glimpse into where that band was at the time.
Q:
Your bandmate Cody Fowler called the new record a testament to Horse Thief as a band. So, what makes you believe in your bandmates? A behind the scenes photo from Horse Thief’s “Million Dollars” live music video shoot at the Tower Theatre in Oklahoma City. You can watch that video on NewsOK.com/blogs/middleofnowhere. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY RYAN MAGNANI]
LOOKATOKC.COM
Neal: One thing we’ve always said since day one as a band was there should be no
M U S I C F E AT U R E
walls between us. So, everybody knows what everybody is feeling. That’s extremely important when you’re spending a lot of time with somebody in a van or inside the studio. I think all of us turned to the music to try get away from everything else in life. At the end of the day, we were meeting up to make music, and that’s when I felt the most happy. We had to keep going. It feels that way now, too. It doesn’t feel like, “Oh, it’s hard so we should put it down and drop it.” It’s hard, so we should keep going and really see it out because we already know music matters a lot to us. ... We can’t let the everyday life stuff get us down.
Q:
How much touring did you do for your previous record, “Fear in Bliss?” Did time on the road inform the new album? Neal: That was a huge part of us getting closer as musicians. Obviously, we’re stuck in a van together all the time and playing together every night. We did two full U.S. tours, three full European tours in a year and a half. That’s a ton. In the grand scheme of things, it doesn’t seem like a lot. Every tour for us, we would get a little bit better together and tighter. ... We would listen to demos in our van. We would demo in hotels if we had a couple days off. We were doing all these little things we didn’t do on the first record. We were listening to the songs and discussing them before we were even writing them. We would listen to s----- iPhone recordings and say ‘This part could be cool, but let’s use it on another song and mix them together.’ By the time we got home from the two-week tour, we’d be able to play the song.
Q:
There was a three year gap between “Fear in Bliss” and “Trails & Truths.” Will your album cycle continue at that pace? Neal: No, we’re trying to get them out faster now. We’re starting on a third record next week. I’m literally starting demos tomorrow. We were always writing. I’ve got songs ready for that. … We’re not sure where we’ll go to actually record, or if it we’ll do it all here. There’s thoughts I might buy a bunch of gear, and we’ll do it ourselves at my house. We’ve never done that, and I like the idea. It might end up being self-produced for the next record.
MARCH 9–22, 2017
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M U S I C F E AT U R E
A N N I E OA K L E Y
From left, Annie Oakley is Nia Personette, Sophia Babb and Grace Babb. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY JACK ROBERTSON]
Annie Oakley
alters
s e v i t c e persp and sound
BY NATHAN POPPE | LOOKatOKC Editor
W
hen things get strange, Annie Oakley writes on. Sophia Babb co-fronts the Oklahoma City-based Americana-leaning act with her twin sister, Grace Babb. Both songwriters, 19, grew up listening to Bible stories, but one narrative stuck out to Sophia. “The story of Abraham and Isaac seemed particularly strange to me,” Sophia shared via email. “The whole idea of a test of faith that involved killing one’s own child put me off, so I wrote ‘Abraham’ as a way of simplifying the absurdity. ‘Just doing what’s asked’ has been and remains a religious justification for all sorts of evil, and this song speaks to that by telling a story about what Isaac’s perspective might have been.” The Babbs joined recording engineer Brine Webb at Lunar Manor, a literal underground recording studio in Oklahoma City, to record alongside Nia Personette (violin), Kyle Reid (pedal steel, cigar box guitar), David Leach (upright bass). The resulting “Lunar Manor Sessions” mini EP captures three rootsy tunes, including “Abraham,” and it landed Feb. 27.
Annie Oakley’s “Lunar Manor Sessions” EP cover [IMAGE PROVIDED BY MADISON WILLIS]
SEE Q&A, 17
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MARCH 9–22, 2017
LOOKATOKC.COM
A N N I E OA K L E Y
M U S I C F E AT U R E
“
From left, Annie Oakley is Grace Babb, Nia Personette and Sophia Babb. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY
Though my sound may
BRITTANY PHILLIPS]
have changed since I started playing shows, my ambition has remained constant: Tell stories through music.
”
— Sophia Babb
Q&A CONTINUED FROM 16 I caught up with the sisters to discuss growing up, getting creative and changing their sound.
Q:
I think you both were 16 the first time I saw you perform. How has your attitude toward pursuing music changed since you started, and how are you balancing music with life? Grace Babb: We’ll be turning 20 this year, which feels ridiculously old. I’m pretty sure I still act like a 9-year-old on and off stage. Despite my inner child, my attitude toward pursuing music has matured. It’s more flexible but also more serious. Pursuing a broadcast journalism degree while also pursuing music has
LOOKATOKC.COM
showed me that I can actually do it all, but at the cost of my free time. I love both paths, and they work well together, so it’s worth it. But it’s not easy. Sophia Babb: My attitude towards music has always been one of reverence, but I have more tools to honor songwriting and performing now. Though my sound may have changed since I started playing shows, my ambition has remained constant: Tell stories through music. I’m balancing music, a part-time journalist gig, and full-time school all at once. It’s difficult because every bit of every day is owed to an obligation — but at least I’m never bored.
Q:
Your new EP marks a return to Lunar Manor studio in Oklahoma City. What makes that place a fitting place to record? Grace: This was the first place I
learned how to make a record and all that goes into it. I know the studio well enough to be comfortable and to be able to get creative with the songs. Sophia: Lunar Manor is fitting for us because Brine Webb, the sound engineer, is brilliantly in tune with the direction of our songs. He knows how to capture us in a way that isn’t far from our live performances, which I really value.
Q:
Tell me more about working with Brine Webb. Besides being pretty hilarious, what was he able to add to the equation on these songs? Grace: Brine is able to offer a genius ear. He has a talent of adding just the right note here and there, whether it be an organ chord or three notes on an electric guitar. Pure genius.
Q:
Your press materials mentioned your sound is moving toward progressive indie-folk with proto-folk rock finish. So what influenced the departure? Grace: A lot of my current favorite artists aren’t in the folk genre, so this has bled over into my pool of musical influence. An electric guitar can add depth and dynamics, and I love having that ability. Falling in love with the electric guitar has influenced a change in my style and songwriting more than any other factor. Sophia: As we’ve developed in age and instrumentation, we’ve discovered new routes of expression that don’t always come through folk ballads. Folk will always be where our roots are, but currently we’re experimenting with sounds and beats that aren’t traditional in folk music, but carry on the tradition of telling stories with song.
MARCH 9–22, 2017
PAGE 17
COVER STORY
MIKE HOSTY
Mike check
Oklahoma’s one-man band Mike Hosty delivers 16th album BY BECKY CARMAN For LOOKatOKC
It might be easiest to sum up Norman musician Mike Hosty in his own words: “I’m big on ideas.” Among his near-future recording plans: an album composed solely of songs where he only talks, a “mumbling country” album and assembling a Latin rhythm section in a studio, over which Hosty plans to PAGE 18
MARCH 9 - MARCH 22, 2017
play the blues. If these ideas sound incongruous, it’s because they are, or because you haven’t yet seen Hosty or his Hosty Duo in concert and don’t realize that he’s a common thread strong enough for it all to make sense. If the latter is true, and you’re an avid Oklahoma music fan, it’s safe to say your required reading isn’t complete. Start at Hosty’s weekly “One
Man Band” show at Norman bar The Deli. Late every Sunday night since 2000, a rowdy assemblage of townies and college students congregates at the charming dive for his residency, which showcases Hosty’s formidable instrumental skill — he’s the guitarist, singer, drummer and kazoo player. It’s also a performance art piece, in a way: topical lyrical asides, commercial audio samples, back-and-forth conversations with
the crowd, comedy bits, free pizza and a humble merchandise display at his feet. It’s not necessarily a typical Hosty show, and that’s by design. “Year after year, I keep adding something to it,” Hosty said. “Multiple instruments, a sampler, looper, different guitars. I always try to keep it like a talk show, like you’re watching a late-night show with songs, jokes. Make people laugh.” LOOKATOKC.COM
MIKE HOSTY
“
COVER STORY
I like the freedom to play, to go in and out of different things at a moment’s notice.” – MIKE HOSTY ‘IT MEANT SOMETHING’ Those laughs seem important to 46-yearold Hosty, who released his 16th album in January. Simply titled “Uno,” the album was recorded at The Mousetrap studio in Norman, with producer Carl Amburn. Hosty himself performed all instrumentation on the album (save for a couple of guest vocalists on “turkey gobble sounds”). As he does onstage, Hosty treats all of the songs with equal deadpan levity, right at home on crunchy blues opener “Gonna Get Ya,” an ode to everyone’s favorite shirt-ruining fair food, the “Turkey Leg” and on “Barfight,” what Hosty calls a “talking song I just made up.” There’s subject matter everywhere to Mike Hosty, which makes sense if you consider his original career path. “I wanted to write jingles,” Hosty said. “Like (singing) ‘You shop Cimarron Pottery!’ or ‘Jewelry is the gift to give…’ They get played on the radio more than actual songs. Everyone knows them, and they’re fun to do. I got on a degree path, and OU offered nothing that had anything remotely to do
with jingles.” Hosty said his advertising degree quickly became worthless once the internet happened and renewed his focus on music. He credits a high school friend named David Rice for urging him to commit to performing music a few years before. “My first show was in 1987 at the Mistletoe Bash. David said, ‘Hey, get a band together, and I’ll put this party on,’ ” Hosty said. “We were completely awful, but it was so much fun. He was a great motivator, a most likely to succeed guy. That’s where I got started.” The following years saw 250-plus shows a year and plenty of miles, many of them as half of the guitar-and-drums outfit Hosty Duo, though lately he’s enjoyed, as he puts it, “playing with himself.” “I like the freedom to play, to go in and out of different things at a moment’s notice,” Hosty said. “It’s been really inspiring after having done the same thing for a long time.” It has been nearly three decades of constant shows since the Mistletoe Bash, but everything came to an unexpected halt in 2014. The previous summer, an
SEE HOSTY, CONTINUED ON PAGE 20 LOOKATOKC.COM
Oklahoma-based one-man band musician Mike Hosty prepares for a recent show at JJ’s Alley Bricktown Pub in Oklahoma City. [PHOTOS BY CHRIS LANDSBERGER] MARCH 9 - MARCH 22, 2017
PAGE 19
COVER STORY
MIKE HOSTY
“
I went in the studio and tried to record every single song I have. It was a desperation thing; I wanted someone to hear them.” – MIKE HOSTY HOSTY, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 19
Mike Hosty. [PHOTOS BY CHRIS LANDSBERGER]
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MARCH 9 - MARCH 22, 2017
off-the-cuff conversation with a cardiologist friend at a party encouraged Hosty to see a doctor, who told him he had one year to undergo open heart surgery to replace an aortic valve. “I asked if he’d give me an echocardiogram before the party, and he said yeah as a joke, but that really led me to get a diagnosis,” Hosty said. “I’d always been told I had a heart murmur, but it was a shock.” He had the procedure in January 2014 and stayed offstage through April 2014, when he returned to performing after being released from a weight restriction — he couldn’t restrict lift his own o musical equipment — and going through cardiac rehabilitation. He said th the health scare lit a bit of a fire, creatively. “I went in the studio and tried to record every single ssong I have. It was a desperation thing; I w wanted someone to hear them,” Hosty said. “And it really made me look around a at what I was doing doing, for sure, and take a sec second look at some of
the things I do and places I play.” For 2017, it appears Hosty’s dance card is full; a glance at his website shows him booked solid through June with local and regional shows, including recent gigs at songwriter havens like Austin’s Saxon Pub and Denton’s Dan’s Silver Leaf, and an upcoming Jazz in June performance in Norman with Eric Clapton drummer Jamie Oldaker. For all his onstage whimsy, at the core lies a serious musician and a road dog, continuing what he always prefers and what few people stick to these days — aiming to make connections with music fans, face-to-face, and show them his many, many ideas. “I want people to have fun and listen to songs,” Hosty said. “Interact, engage them. As soon as you see them start smiling, you’re onto something. I understand that hype is important, but I’d rather someone listen to a song and buy a CD because it meant something to them and they want to support it. That means the world to me.”
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MIKE HOSTY
LOOKATOKC.COM
COVER STORY
MARCH 9 - MARCH 22, 2017
PAGE 21
ART SPEAKS
EXHIBIT
SEEING ‘RED’ National cowboy museum exhibit showcases the Western bandanna
BY BRANDY MCDONNELL For LOOKatOKC
As far as fashion accessories go, it’s hard to beat one that can be used as a head scarf, earmuffs, neckerchief, headband, arm sling, pot holder, wash cloth, water filter, tourniquet and signal flag. If a cowboy needs to blindfold a rowdy bronco or shield his face from a cloud of dust, he typically needs look no further than the square of cloth tied somewhere on his person. With the new exhibition “A Yard of Turkey Red: The Western Bandanna,” the National Cowboy & Western
The photograph “Cowboy with Silk Bandanna,” taken in 1895, is on display in the new exhibit at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. [PHOTO BY STEVE GOOCH]
SEE BANDANNA, 23
PAGE 22
MARCH 9–22, 2017
LOOKATOKC.COM
ART SPEAKS
EXHIBIT
FROM LEFT: Bandannas featured in the exhibit “A Yard of Turkey Red: The Western Bandanna” at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum: A silk “Fancy Bandanna,” circa 1865; a paisley pattern; a silk “Dice Pattern Bandanna,” circa 1880. BELOW, LEFT: A cotton “Work Bandanna” from Green & Sons, circa 1890. [IMAGES PROVIDED]
BANDANNA CONTINUED FROM 22
ON EXHIBIT “A Yard of Turkey Red: The Western Bandanna”
Heritage Museum weaves together the historical, cultural and fashionable significance of the versatile square of cloth. Prized by 19th-century horsemen for both its practical and decorative qualities and later popularized in Wild West shows, novels and movies, the bandanna is almost as integral to cowboy iconography as hats, boots and spurs. “The bandannas are really the unique and rare part of this (exhibit),” said Don Reeves, who holds the McCasland Chair of Cowboy Culture at the museum. “There are fabrics and bandannas that go back to the 1820s, 1840s, several of them from the 1860s. These are things people know — or think they know — about what the Western bandanna is and how it was used by cowboys and others in the West. But there’s a lot more to the story.”
EXOTIC ORIGINS
When: Through May 14 Where: National Cowboy & Western
Heritage Museum, 1700 NE 63 Information: nationalcowboymuseum.org
or 478-2250
LOOKATOKC.COM
The new exhibit showcases the rare bandannas and black-and-white photographs from the John H. Thillmann collection donated to the museum in 2015. “He’s been a donor and a friend of the museum for, I don’t know, 25 years. And then he called up one day a few years ago and said, ‘Would you like these two collections?’ And I’ve always coveted themv … so I said, ‘Sure,’ ” Reeves said. “There’s a lot of these (bandannas)
A portion of the Teddy Roosevelt bandanna on display in “A Yard of Turkey Red: The Western Bandanna” exhibit at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum. [PHOTO BY STEVE GOOCH]
from that era that people have never seen because they were used up, thrown away, became rags. They just didn’t survive. John (had) to spend … decades looking for these, maybe only obtaining one or two year because that’s all he could find. They were that rare.” In the 19th century, it was common for cowboys to stroll into the local mercantile, buy a square yard of cloth cut from a bolt and tie it around his neck. These days, bandannas are commonplace, mass-produced items that can be found for a cheap price at a big-box or dollar store. But the often paisley-patterned cloth squares have exotic origins. SEE BANDANNA, 24
MARCH 9–22, 2017
PAGE 23
ART SPEAKS
EXHIBIT
BANDANNA CONTINUED FROM 23
The photograph “Cowboy with Turkey Red Bandanna,” taken in 1885, is on display in the new exhibit. [PHOTO BY STEVE GOOCH]
PAGE 24
MARCH 9–22, 2017
“It is the story of confluence of cultures: the trade, the Scottish, the Spanish, the Indians. And it’s even relevant today,” said Inez Wolins, the museum’s chief public experience officer. The word “bandanna” — or “bandana,” as it is typically spelled nowadays — is derived from “bandhnu,” the term used in India for tie-and-dyed trade cloth popular among Europeans since the 17th century. And “Turkey red” refers not to the North American bird but to the term cloth merchants of Renaissance Europe gave to rich, red-dyed fabric garnered from the Ottoman Empire and India. The red cotton cloth got its name from the Middle Eastern multistep process of dying fabrics with madder root to produce a cloth that could keep its color even when washed in harsh detergents and exposed to even harsher sunlight. “Compare these to the bandannas you buy at the dime store, or the dollar store as it is now … and you see the red ones — a certain kind of red — and you see the blue, which we’ll think of as indigo blue. And it’s the blue of our jeans, and the red is the variation of the Turkey red that was so popular in the 1800s,” Reeves said. “In the hundred years before that and earlier, you had to be wealthy to obtain red cloth. And then British mills and some of the American mills made it possible with the process of alizarin dyes … so people didn’t have to have much money to have this nice red bandanna that would be color fast.” “So even today, the two bandannas you see are the Turkey red and the indigo blue,” he added. “And almost all of them have paisleys on them — that’s another part of the story.” The familiar paisley pattern originated in Persia as a stylized floral motif with religious meaning, and it was used on fine fabrics, including expensive Kashmir shawls brought back to Europe by ship captains and other travelers in the 1700s. By 1808, the popular swirling pattern was being woven in Paisley, Scotland, and the name of the place stuck with it. “When we first started talking about it, we thought a lot of people would like
to know more about the cowboys of the West, and how the bandanna was worn in the West, how it was used, what designs there were, what was more popular. Quickly, as we started working with John Thillmann’s collection of bandannas, we found out that these are amazing fabrics,” Reeves said. “The people who really have been most excited about this are a number of mostly ladies who are very fascinated in the fabrics. … It’s not often you get to see bolts of fabrics from the 1850s and 1840s, the different patterns that were very popular during the Civil War, and very high-quality examples of them, too. These aren’t pieces with lots of holes in them and all used up; they’re beautiful fabrics.”
DRESSY FLOURISHES While many bandannas were destined for the grimy work of wiping sweaty brows and binding bloody wounds, the exhibition fabrics and photos showcase cloth squares with flashy polka dots, ornate paisleys and veritable gardens of flowers. That’s because colorful, extravagantly patterned bandannas were the go-to accessory of 19th-century working cowboys, who literally had to carry their whole life on their person and their horse. “If you went to town or went to a dance or whatever, they could afford a fancy piece of cloth. They could put that in their bag,” Reeves said. “They couldn’t keep a topcoat around, these guys, but that was one thing they could afford to dress them up.” Bandannas continue to be prized for both their utilitarian and ornamental functions. Like the California vaqueros, bikers often wear them on their heads, tied in the back. Farmers, firefighters and outdoors enthusiasts often keep them around as sweatbands or cooling rags. “It’s pretty au courant to have a bandanna on your dog. You still see kids wearing bandannas,” Wolins said. The museum is planning Bandanna Week, March 26-April 1, during which people can get free admission when they wear a bandanna. Pet owners can enter their furry friends into the bandanna pet photography contest, children can make tie-dye bandannas, and history buffs can hear Reeves give a lecture.
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E V E RY T H I N G I S N OT O K I I I
MARCH 9-12 Four-day punk festival Everything is Not OK III returns at 7 p.m. March 9 to 89th St. Collective, 8911 N Western Ave., with nightly shows through March 12. The March 9 concert, headlined by Tenement, also features Oklahoma City act Cherry Death. For advance tickets, go to www.ticketstorm.com. For full lineup information, go to www.facebook.com/events/319994728366190. — Becky Carman
Cherry Death [PHOTO PROVIDED BY GARETT FISBECK]
MUSIC MARCH 9: Parker Millsap, Sooner Theatre. (Norman) 9: Space4Lease, Kississippi, Fern Mayo, Power House. 9-12: Everything is Not OK III feat. Tenement, Cherry
25: Costello album release, Opolis. (Norman) 26: Margo Price, ACM@UCO Performance Lab. 30: Ronnie Milsap, Hudiburg Chevrolet Center.
(Midwest City) 31: The Nixons reunion, Chevy Bricktown Events Center.
Death, 89th St. Collective. 10: Jimmy Eat World, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 10: Hosty, Belle Isle Brewery. 10: Beau Jennings and the Tigers, Vonna Pearl, Opolis.
(Norman) 11: Miranda Lambert, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 11: Shane Smith and the Saints, Wormy Dog Saloon. 12: Conor Oberst, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 13: Closeness, High Up, Living Body. Power House. 16: Oklahoma Uprising, Wormy Dog Saloon. 17: Willie Nelson, WinStar World Casino. (Thackerville) 17: Styx, Riverwind Casino. (Norman) 17-18: Tribute to Joni Mitchell, Blue Door. 18: Heard on Hurd, Broadway and Hurd. (Edmond) 20: Matisyahu, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 21: Dawes, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 22: Jamie Lin Wilson, Blue Door. 22: Cory Branan, The Vanguard. (Tulsa) 24: Shovels & Rope, Matthew Logan Vasquez, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 24: Samantha Crain album release show, Opolis. (Norman)
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APRIL 5: Neil Hamburger, ACM@UCO Performance Lab. 8: Kris Kristofferson, Riverwind Casino. (Norman) 8: Rainbows Are Free, Helen Kelter Skelter, Blue Note. 9: The Orwells, Opolis. (Norman) 9: Bill Maher, Civic Center Music Hall. 11: Local H, 89th St. Collective. 15: Heard on Hurd, Broadway and Hurd. (Edmond) 20: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Chesapeake Energy
Arena. 20: Magnet School, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 21: Hayes Carll, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 22: A Perfect Circle, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 25: The Flaming Lips, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 27: Eroica Trio, Armstrong Auditorium. (Edmond) 27-29: Norman Music Festival, downtown. (Norman) 28: Todrick Hall, Civic Center Music Hall. 29: Explosions in the Sky, Criterion. 30: Alton Brown, Civic Center Music Hall.
30: Andrew McMahon in the Wilderness, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa)
M AY 2: Trey Anastasio Band, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 4: Alice Cooper, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 4: Silversun Pickups, Diamond Ballroom. 6: Kristin Chenoweth, Broken Arrow Performing Arts
Center. (Broken Arrow) 10: Ty Segall, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 10: Tim Kasher, Opolis. (Norman) 10: Sam Outlaw, Blue Door. 11: Ray Wylie Hubbard, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 13: Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, Chesapeake Energy Arena. 13-14: Kinky Friedman, Blue Door. 16: Arlo Guthrie, Hudson Performance Hall. 16: The Chainsmokers, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 16: Brian Wilson, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 20: Heard on Hurd, Broadway and Hurd. (Edmond) 23: Meat Puppets, 89th St. Collective. 24: New Kids on the Block, Paula Abdul, BOK Center.
(Tulsa) 26: Rocklahoma feat. Def Leppard, Soundgarden, The Offspring, Pryor Creek Concert and Festival Grounds. (Pryor)
MARCH 9–22, 2017
PAGE 25
G L O R U N 5 K | S TA R S A N D S T R I P E S PA R K
8 : 1 0 P. M . & 1 0 : 1 0 P. M . MARCH 24 The Glo Run 5K is scheduled for 8:10 p.m. and 10:10 p.m. March 24 at Stars and Stripes Park, 3701 Lake Hefner Drive. The race is a chip-timed, nighttime 5K through a neon luau-themed glowing course featuring of huge glowing pineapples, giant glowing luau dancers, light shows and more. Entry fee is $29.99. Go to theglorun.com/oklahomacity for registration and information.
O KC I M P R OV | PA R A M O U N T T H E AT R E
F R I D AY S A N D S AT U R D AY S THOUGH APRIL 7 OKC Improv, Oklahoma City’s platform for improvised comedy theater, presents its next showcase with shows at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through April 7 at The Paramount Theatre at 11 N. Lee Ave. Each show is $10 or see both for $15. Tickets and information are available at the door or at OKCImprov.com.
PAGE 26
MARCH 9–22, 2017
LOOKATOKC.COM
‘ M O M E N T U M O KC 2 0 1 7 ’ | P L A Z A D I S T R I C T
8 T O 1 1 P. M . M A R C H 2 4 - 2 5 OKC’s “Momentum” art show returns from 8 to 11 p.m. March 24 and 25 at three Plaza District venues: Graphite, District House and The Venue. This event features Oklahoma artists ages 30 and younger in an exhibition created specifically for them. The show’s mission is to help young artists gain experience and meet new audiences. Attendees encounter film, performance, new media, installation, music and more. Featured spotlight artists are Lisandro Boccacci, Krystle Brewer and Summer Zah. Curator is Kate Van Steenhuyse and emerging curator is Kyle Cohlmia. Tickets are $10. Go to ovac-ok.org/programs/momentum for tickets and information.
Artwork by Lisandro Boccacci
B O U R B O N PA I R I N G D I N N E R | VA S T
6 T O 9 P. M . M A R C H 9 Vast, 333 W Sheridan Ave atop the Devon Tower, will host a bourbon pairing with bourbons from Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort, Kentucky. The dinner is 6 to 9 p.m. March 9 and will begin with a tasting of Buffalo Trace, Eagle Rare and Blanton’s bourbons. The tasting will be followed by a three-course beef dinner paired with three bourbon cocktails. The event will be co-hosted by Jennifer Brian, who will speak about the types of bourbon at the beginning of each course. Tickets are $115. Go to vastokc.com/special-events for tickets and information.
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MARCH 9–22, 2017
PAGE 27
SHOTS
S T R E E T C A R C O N S T R U C T I O N , S O U T H O KC
Crews weld six 59-foot-long sections of steel to create a 354-foot section of rail to embed in the ground for the MAPS 3 streetcar track line. The steel is stored near SW 10 and Robinson, and that is where the track is being welded into blocklong lengths. Civic leaders broke ground recently on the OKC Streetcar track line construction. Service is scheduled to begin late next year.
Two sections of steel are seen immediately after they were joined by a weld.
PAGE 28
MARCH 9–22, 2017
Steel is stacked, waited to be pulled for welding.
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S T R E E T C A R C O N S T R U C T I O N , S O U T H O KC
Sparks are created when sections of rail are welded by crews using a special machine.
SHOTS
A worker uses a grinder on a joint after two pieces of steel were welded.
[PHOTOS BY JIM BECKEL, FOR LOOKATOKC]
LOOKATOKC.COM
MARCH 9–22, 2017
PAGE 29
2007 Malibu high miles but nice! great cond $3150 863-6399
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Page 30
2008 Civic 2 door, 86K, good cond, runs great, $5900, 968-1186.
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2002 Honda Accord, drives great $2,995. See at 2864 N. Shields in Moore (405) 209-4815
2001 Buick Regal, 52K mi, new tires, $4500 firm, optional payment plan by owner,405-658-3192
Nova SS 1966 Chevrolet Chevy II Beautiful restored Nova, 3274spd, marina blue. 4000 miles since completed. Lightly modified. $47,500 firm, 405-464-0743
March 9 - March 22, 2017
2003 C240, leather, wife's car, sunroof, low miles, like new, $5495 obo, 405-213-5018.
'73 Chevy Nova Coupe 350 V8,
2005 Acura MDX 126 K mi, tow pkg, $ 5495. 823-2867
64 Dodge Dart runs drives needs brake work $2750 651-8248.
2008 Ford Taurus, runs great, $3,495. Come see at 2864 N. Shields in Moore(405)209-4815
55K MI. $12,200obo 405-634-3565
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Metal carrier with ramp, fits in receiver of trailer hitch, $450obo. 405-701-8439
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BEST VALUE ON NEW CADILLACS UNITED CADILLAC 800-310-6130 '95 Fleetwood brown, leather, fair cond, 168K, $2,000. 405-839-8309
1998 Marquis, 75K, new tires, $3500 cash or possible payment plan by owner, 658-3192. '11 XJL, 1 owner 33K mi, like new show car $30,000. 405-470-2767
2006 Commander top of the line! loaded nice $6950 863-6399
2008 Saturn Aura, 4 door, loaded, sunroof, 3.6L engine, 42K miles, blue, $7000, 405-321-3107.
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Housekeeping & Laundry Aide
Apply at Heritage Park at 6912 NW 23rd St
2008 Toyota Sequoia 1 owner, 3rd row seats, blk, exc cond. garaged, hwy mi $12,250 obo 405-760-7792
20-2012/2013 Peterbilt Model 388 Day Cabs
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GIANT INVENTORY OF TRUCKS UNITED CHEVY BUICK CADILLAC GMC 800-310-6130
2011 Express Cargo van shelves & tommylift. nice $7450 863-6399
2010 OUTBACK SYDNEY 35 FT 5TH WHEEL Super nice, 3 slides, very spacious, lots of extras $24,000.or reasonable offer 580-931-7639
2004 Jayco Flight TT like new 2 bds loaded $6000 405-219-5825
Driller Helper & Laboratory Technician Will train. Some Benefits. Apply in person at 809 NW 34th in Moore.
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2016 Ford T350 12 passenger
weekdays & weekends for Group Home Clean OSBI and MVR reports. EOE. ยก 405-949-2271
van 30K mi like new! $26,500 obo 580-504-6588
2005 GMC Savannah Southern Comfort Conversion Van - custom built. 1 owner, pristine! 39K mi 1 owner $28,500 405-596-4558
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2005 Dodge Crew Cab leather loaded nice $5450 863-6399
Garage Door Solutions Now Hiring Technicians. Experience with garage door installation or construction preferred. Call 949-9240 or 630-5515 2002 Honda Odyssey, runs perfect $2,495. See at 2864 N. Shields in Moore (405)209-4815
Truck Mechanic Needed
2006 Ford Ranger Ext Cab V6 auto, CD $5250 863-6399 sport bed $4950 863-6399
'97 Ford Ranger Ext cab sport bed V6 auto $2950 863-6399
for RDSI Waste Services. 405-348-8411 or Email info@rdsiok.com
2008 Mako Boat Center Console, Lowrance depth finder, 90 hp Mercury motor, Motor Guide trolling motor. New batteries. Live well, bait well, storage compartments, and self bailing deck. Clean and in great condition. $7500. 580-641-0225
Astro fish boat, 18ft, runs exc., $5,000. 745-4327 or 823-3603
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LPNs - Dbl Weekends CNAs 11-7 & 7-3 Apply at Heritage Park at 6912 NW 23rd St
LPNs - Dbl Weekends Apply at Edmond Health Care
CRANE OPERATOR
Minimum 2 years experience with hydraulic & lattice cranes. CDL & bridge experience a plus. Pay based on experience. EOE Call 405-521-0160
Career Fair Customer Service Reps Open House Interview Day at Love's Travel Stops Corporate Office in Oklahoma City. Tuesday, March 7th and Thursday, March 9th, 2017 from 4:00pm to 6:00pm 1331 W Memorial Road Suite 100 Oklahoma City, OK 73114. Please apply to loves.com/careers to submit your RSVP for the event! Attendees must bring a resume to be considered.
HONDA 2011 CRV 4 WHL DRIVE READY TO TOW WITH TOW SAFE CABLE, ELECTRIC CABLE AND TOW BAR. KEY ENTRY AND POWER MIRROR, PW REAR FROST. SALE FOR $9,995.00. Call 405 830-5860 in Jones , OK 2010 Honda Pilot, nice, 1 owner, 75K miles, $13,000, 580-277-0513
CNAs - all shifts LPN - 11- 7 Sat/Sun
Apply at Skyview Nursing Center at 2200 N. Coltrane
2012 Ford F-250 King Ranch, 6.7L PowerStroke, 4x4, exc cond, 28K, 1-owner, $39,000 405-990-0520
2005 Ford F150 Reg cab
CASHIERS - nights and weekends. Rudy's Bar-B-Q. Apply at 3437 W. Memorial or call 405-254-4712. Looking for hard & loyal workers.
at 39 E. 33rd St
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Learn on the job. Good pay/ benefits, 30 days vacation/yr., $ for school. No exp. OK. HS grads ages 17-34. Call Mon-Fri 877-628-9562
Cook - PRN
Apply at Skyview Nursing Center at 2200 N. Coltrane Cooks, Thai food 1 yr exp req'd Resume to Rattana Holding 1821 NW 22nd St Oklahoma City OK 73106
Dietary Aides
Apply at Heritage Park at 6912 NW 23rd St.
Housekeeper
Apply at Edmond Health Care at 39 E. 33rd St.
Exp. Cooks Dishwasher Aide
Apply at Edmond Health Care at 39 E. 33rd St. 3804 N. Barr
March 9 - March 22, 2017
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SERVICE ADVISORS & SERVICE TECHNICIANS
Maintenance Supervisor
with mechanical license. The Park at Memorial Apts. Apply at 4201 W Memorial Road.
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PLUMBERS
with repair experience. 401(k). Lots of work! 627-6072 or 619-7900
March 9 - March 22, 2017
Residential & Commercial Electrical Journeymen
needed to start immediately. OKC metro area. Apply at Welco Electric, 5221 S. Lindsey, OKC. 405-634-3695
David Stanley Chevrolet, 614 SW 74th St, OKC is now hiring. Valid drivers license required. Must be 21, pass background check & drug test. Paid Vacation, Holidays, 401K, health, dental, vision, life & disability insurance available. Please apply at Davidstanleyautogroup.com
LOOKATOKC.COM
LOOKATOKC.COM
March 9 - March 22, 2017
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March 9 - March 22, 2017
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March 9 - March 22, 2017
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March 9 - March 22, 2017
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1213 SW 60th St, 1 & 2 bdr apts, $375 - $475 mo w/$250 dep, No Sec 8. 632-9849
Shuttle Bus Drivers
needed part time for Norman location. CDL with passenger endorsement requirements. Call Cory at 314-422-2020.
Edmond - Large 2bed, 2bath, 2car Condo ¡ $900/mo ¡ 405-226-9607
OPEN SUNDAY 2-4 6901 N.W. 133rd Terrace, Okla City, OK $179,900 Heidelberger & Co/405-787-5400 Eff. all bills paid & furnished, off NE Kelly $475 427-7566/314-7905
Bank owned 3/2/2, 2 liv, 1607sf, lg yard, $78,000 RltyExp 414-8753
New Luxury 3/2/2 Duplex 13516 Brandon Pl, fp, Deer Creek Schools, near Mercy 842-7300
Hunting Land ¡‘¡ 160ac. Byng, OK, $3200/ac. Liz 580-618-1622 (3) 2br, laminate & ceramic floors ceiling fans, fenced yrd, FP, W/D hkup, ch&a, $695/mo+$300dep. 4613 Creek Court, OKC 73135 @ Sooner & 48th. Pat 817-845-5354
Year End Clearance Sale
Save thousands! Lenders offering ZERO down with land and less than perfect credit. FREE 50 inch TV with new home purchase!! Call 405-631-7600
4bed 2bath Used Doublewide
Avail. Huge savings over 2100 square feet $46K, home only price. Only one left and will go fast at this price. Being refurbed. Clayton Homes 405-631-7600
Lg 1&2bd, 2 lndry rooms, covered parking, $375-475mo 470-3535
TOP LOCATION!
Pd. wtr/garb. Near malls. 2 bed from $675 341-4813
3bed 2bath singlewide set up &
ready for immediate move in OKC Call Clayton Homes 405-631-7600
E of OKC, pay out dn. Many choices mobile home ready. Call for maps TERMS 275-1695 www.paulmilburnacreages.com
I BUY & SELL HOUSES 27 YRS EXP 650-7667 HOMESOFOKCINC.COM
I-40W & Rt 66, 1/2 mi from Banner school. Call or write George: 240-486-2955 gecep@hotmail.com
Furnished/Unfurnished. Bills Paid Unfurn 1 bed $169 wk, $640 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.
907 N Kentucky-Eff. apt w/bath, kitchenette, bills paid, $435 + dep & proof of income, 473-6400.
155 acres 20 mi from OKC near
*Check This Out* " Great Buy" 714 N 4th Commercial Property Sayre OK Corner Lot $110,000 call Lloyd Adams 580-515-3305
2bd 2ba range frig ch&a gar. $800 mo $700dep + app fee 514-5348
57th/N May Crescent Park Apts Secure, HW floors. cer tile. Grt loc. ALL BILLS PAID! 840-7833
2 bedroom house, ch&a, $550 mo + $500 dep, No pets, No section 8 » 677-7492
12 Homes 2-4 beds $925-2195 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com
3/1.5/2 CH/A 2121 Memphis Dr $875mth + Dep Benny 201-1487
10100 Little Pond Drive, 4/2/2, 1600 sf, $1350 mo, $1000 dep, 370-1077. 5 Bedroom, Inground Pool, New Grey Wood Floors 6701 Basswood Canyon RD, See pics on Craigslist, $1700. 405-406-7569
Drivers
Box Truck Driver
Large healthcare laundry needs hospital delivery driver for straight box truck. Veterans encouraged to apply. After training, starting pay $500-$600 per week depending on exp. Must have good MVR and pass background & drug check. Non-smoker pref'd. Great company. To apply fax resume to (405) 622-2415. EOE
CDL Driver
Oilfield Trucking Please call Terry, (405) 659-1428
LOOKATOKC.COM
wanted for Edmond waste management company. Call 348-8411 or email resumes to info@rdsiok.com MID-CON CARRIERS CORP. Class A CDL - OKC Based/Home Weekly. Excellent oppty. & pay Clean Assigned New Equipment Shannon Hart (405) 237-1300 www.midconcarriers.com
Unique 2004 built, 2564sf, 3/2/3, granite, 2 liv/2 din, .23 ac corner lot $238,000 Realty Exp 414-8753
GYROS & SANDWICH STORE IN EDMOND Owner retiring $35K More Information 405-695-0122
OILFIELD DRIVERS 1-ton/hotshots, Flatbed, Winch/Gin
$2500 sign on bonus Apply online @
www.stevenstrucking.com 405-745-2363 ext240
Eureka Springs oldest attraction, good cash flow, owner retiring, business/property complete turnkey, 479-650-1012.
Ideal Starter Home or Investment Property - 2 bed, 1 bath, living, dining & kitchen. MUST SEE! $55,000 ¡ Completely Renovated 1900 NE 25th St ¡ 405-503-5505
March Specials
1Bed $495 - 2Bed $595 751-8088
Muntage Apts For Rent With All Bills Paid Option. ¡‘¡ 405-946-0588 ¡‘¡
Putnam Heights Plaza
1 & 2 bed, newly remodeled, ch/a, 1830 NW 39th 524-5907
Castle Tower Apts For Rent ¡‘¡ 405-946-0637 ¡‘¡ GREAT Office Space. Various NW locations, 300-6000sf 946-2516
6620 Bayberry Drive, 73162, 3 bed, 2 ba, 2 car, approx 1400 sf, $1145 mo, $900 dep, 370-1077.
800 N Meridian
1 & 2 Bedroom 946-9506
SHARP! - 2232 NW 54 3/2/2 $995 appls no pets 755-2510 317-2479 4821 NW 74th St. ¡ 4bed, 2bath, 2car garage, Edgewater Park by Hefner Golf Course, $1,200/mo+ $800dep. For info. 405-412-2163. Lakeshore Estates, Putnam City Schools, 3/2/2, No Pets or Sec. 8, $1,295+dep. Others 405-210-0470
March 9 - March 22, 2017
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7 Homes 2-4 beds $750-$1395 Express Realty 844-6101 www.expressrealtyok.com
3721 NW 28th St, 3 bd, 2 ba, $875 mo, no sec 8, 721-3757. 2 nice 2bed 1ba $650. Dntwn Apt 1 bed $550 2bed $600 749-0603
2Bed on quiet street, large fenced yard, garage, $525mo 596-8410
Estate Auction
New & Used. Financing available. 1233 SE 44th 405-632-8954
Boston Terriers, AKC, s/w/ chipped, $500-$600, 405-434-0534
Sat. March 11th ‘ 9:30am
BOSTON TERRIERS, 3 Adults, $450-$850ea. Dog pens $400ea. » » » 405-853-1957 » » »
Estate of Joy Warren
11001 Massey Terr ‘ OKC
Sec 8, 2 bed, 3841 SW 34, $650 + $500; Sec 8, 1 bed, 2319 S Brock, $575 + $500; 685-8240.
1935sqft home on 1.4 acres 3 bed 2 bath 2 car garage. Open House Mar 6 ¡ 4-6:30pm
1504 S Binkley clean 2bd 1ba 1car $575 Harris Real Estate 410-4300
85,000 mi. 1994 GMC Sonoma. Lots of furn & households. See:
Going out of Window AC
Business 100s of parts $1-$20ea 405-799-6843 ‘ 405-631-2177
German Shepherd Pups, dark BIBlack & Black, Champ. bloodline, Norris's, Alpha-Hund Hougan Norris's Raven Grettel. Certified pedigree, Males & Females, 1st & 2nd series shots, h/w preventer & vet chked $700ea. 405-650-5118
Boxer puppies ACA 3 males $350 580-239-1843
2006 Nissan Maxima Sedan
kencarpenterauction.com
Tami 406-5235 ‘ Ken 620-1524
MWC For Rent/Sale. Nice homes $400/up. RV space $200 306-2576
Annual Spring Equipment Consignment Auction
¡‘¡ March 11th, 9:00am ¡‘¡
I will share my clean comfortable home with a veteran or disabled veteran. My home is 10 minutes from VA Hospital. Large private bedroom & bath. 40" flat screen TV. Kitchen & laundry privileges. NO DRUGS. Smoker OK. $500 month, all bills paid. Ask for Lynn, 405-840-1414.
South of Norman on I-35 DIRECTIONS: 2 MILES S. OF NORMAN, OK ON WEST SIDE OF I-35 (1 MILE S. OF CANADIAN RIVER BRIDGE). FROM I-35 S. OF NORMAN, GO 1 BLOCK W. ON HWY 9 (EXIT 106) TO FIRST STOP LIGHT THEN S. 1 1/4MILE. Accepting Consignments March 6th-March 10th, 10AM-5PM. Expecting 100 Tractors & 500 Pieces of Farm Equip., Trucks & Trailers. For more info. visit
Deere Season ‘ Get Em While They're Running!
2007 JD 717A 19hp Kaw, 48'' tuned, ready to go $4100. 2006 JD 757 25hp 60'' 672hrs tuned, ready to go. $3950 2010 Z425 23hp 54'' $1850. 2009 Z830A 30hp Kaw 72'' 1300hr $4200 » 405-641-9932 2008 Farris Zero Turn 48'' lawn mower, well maintained $2250 Call Andrew 405-562-0775
AUCTION
300+/- Coins & Collectibles Sat March 11, 2017 @ 11am Embassy Suites Hotel 1815 S Meridian OKC
Propane tank end caps for fire pits: 30"-$40, 37"-$60, 41"-$70. Rebuilt Propane tanks: 250 gal-$420, 500 gal-$595. 405-375-4189 or BLTTanks.com
Ruger Rifle and Shotgun Pair Hwkeye cmpct .243 (Nikon scope) & Red Lbl O/U 20g 50th anniv ed. $1300 for pair Firm Call or text Sam: 405-326-0434 Email: SamWeg12@gmail.com
2 bags of Dead Sea skin and nail products, paid over $900, sell for $450 obo, 405-655-3390.
Winter Sale! Large selection of gas & electric cars! 872-5671.
We buy GUNS Mustang Pawn & Gun. Over 1000 guns! 376-GUNS NEED 20,000 BOOKS, CDs, DVDs records, posters, art, comics. Tulsa. Will travel. Can pick up in 24 hrs. Gardner's Used Books.
DUCK HUNTERS! Camo 4hole dog trailer storage & water cont, new tires $1450 or trade ??? 651-8248
5x8 » 5x10 » 6x10 » 6x12 16' tandem all w/gate ramps $700-$1750 cash » 405-201-6820
Financing avail. 30day-5yr warr. $125&up 1233 SE 44th 632-8954 GE S/S Refrigerator GE S/S Refrigerator $300dishwasher $75-SSsink & faucets &50 $300.00 405-685-2133
Car hauling trailer, 16 ft, tandem, no text or email, $795, 412-3746. Sheet Metal 3'x10' $16 ¡ Trim & Screws ¡ Mon-Sat ¡ 390-2077
Washer, Dryer, Dishwashr, Stove Fridge, $100 ea, can del, 820-8727 Haier 8.8lb lrg capacity compact washer 6cycle $175 405-436-1570
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Paying cash for: Diabetic Test WANTED Salvage tractors 2wd or 4wd any size or kind 641-7728
March 9 - March 22, 2017
17 week old F ’ $1300 Includes 1st Vac's, 405-397-1199
Growthy, Gentle, LBW. Add muscle & growth. Most $1,900-$2,900. John Kusel ¡ 580-759-6038
BULL MASTIFF, AKC, 1F 10wks s/w $600 ‘ 405-221-0881 Bull Terrier pups, AKC, blk & wht, and all white, 3F, 1M, $800,
will meet ¡ 580-235-5684
Chihuahua, TEACUPS, 8 wks, 1st shot, tiny $350 cash 405-434-1624 Chihuahua, ACA, 2M, short & long coat, $350-$450, 405-627-0419. Chinese Sharpei, adult M&F, house broken, $250 ea, 550-0886. GERMAN SHEPHERD AAA AKC Purebred pups + FREE food, leash, collar, training papers . Police dog parents. EXC guardians with Kids. Black/Silver/Tan, $600 972-333-4394, can deliver.
Cow Calf Pairs 40 Fancy Northern First Calf Black Angus pairs $2100. 580-370-6577 Longhorn bulls, 18 months old, fertility tested, $1500-$2500, 405-830-8489. Wilson 52' straight floor cattle trailer. JD 568 Round baler 405-574-4642 Tuttle
Collie puppies, good obedience/ agility prospects for kids, champ bloodlines, s/w, health guarantee, $300 each, 580-716-9002. German Shepherd AKC Puppy AKC registered German Shepherd male puppy Vet checked and shots 11 weeks $800. Txt 405-371-9110 M14308@yahoo
Airedale Pup, AKC, 9wks, 1M s/w, $800. 479-774-1241 joysairedales.com Akdash Puppies, Available 4/1/17 M $500, F $400. 918-440-5555 AKITA 4-F AKC 10 wks vet checked 1st shots and wormed. Kept inside and played with daily. Great personalities $500. 405-414-0837
English Bulldog puppy, AKC, 1 M, 12 weeks, shots, vet checked, $1400, www.stubbornbullies.com 918-407-5220 or 918-407-5221.
AUSSIE PUPS, TOYS, ASDR,
Largest book store in Okla!!
(918) 409-1096 627-7323 250-7381
F2 Savanna Kitten!
45 BIG STOUT LIMOUSIN BULLS
RosenfeltAuctions.com
or Call 405-364-9277 or Call or Text 405-659-8998
CFA-TICA REG. PERSIAN KITTENS $600, kittcatsmeow.com
German Shepherd Pups, dark BIBlack & Black, Champ. bloodline, Norris's, Alpha-Hund Hougan Norris's Raven Grettel. Certified pedigree, Males & Females, 1st & 2nd series shots, h/w preventer & vet chked $700ea. 405-650-5118
Strips: FreeStyle, OneTouch, & Accuchek, also CPAP/BIPAP Machines: Jim 405-202-2527
2M $700, 1F $800, s/w, 2 Red Tri, 1 Red Merle. 405-344-7590
German Shepherd Pups ‘ AKC $700-$900 ‘ 405-282-4456 view pics at newsok.com
Aussies Red Tri Mini Male, blue eyes, ASDR, 6 wks $750 580-628-1167 Australian Shepherd Puppies Registered Australian Shepherds & Aussie Retrievers prices vary loveofaussies.com
English Bulldogs, born 12/23, 3F, 1M, $1500, 405-853-1170.
Basset Hound 1/2 Mix Puppies, 8wks old, FREE to good home, 4M 3F mixed colors 405-505-5340
6wks, s/w, all puppies carry blue & tri, $2,000ea. 758-3761
BLUE PIT PUPPIES
English Springer Spaniels, AKC, M & F left, black & white $600ea. Harrah Resident 678-772-3231.
8 wks old $150 obo. 405-924-8479
English Bulldog, AKC, 4M, 3F,
GERMAN SHEPHERD AKC, POP, S/W Sable, White, Black and Liver-2 litters of very nice large smart puppies with great temperament's ready for a loving and caring home. Full AKC Reg $700. 405-664-4517 GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC reg., West German working lines, red/black, 4M, 2F, 9wks old, German pedigree, POP, Siger champions on both side! $2,350$3,500. 408-0540 leave message
LOOKATOKC.COM
German Shepherd puppy, reg, 1 female left, s/w, vet checked, $950, 405-762-0952 or goldenmaplegsd@gmail.com
POMERANIANS ACA small. s/w m/chip $600ea 918-421-1660
German Shepherd Pups 2F 1M 1st shots/wormed $350 EACH ‘ 405-219-8413
Great Dane Pup, Reg. black M, $600. 405-481-5558
GERMAN SHEPHERDS, AKC, 7 weeks, 5M, 3F, champion pedigree, s/w, $750, 405-250-8266.
Great Danes, ACA, 8wks, s/w 5F, 3M, all colors, $550. » » 580-465-1571 » »
GERMAN SHEPHERD AKC PUPS solid wht s/w $400. 405-881-9844
Jack Russell puppies, $250, shots, wormed, vet checked, 580-301-0253 or 580-480-5692.
Giant Schnauzer Puppies, 4.5mos old, AKC, great pedigree, $500ea. (405) 201-8603/201-8703 lv msg
LAB PUPPIES AKC REG 4F 1M 10wks UTD S/W $450 TEXT 405-664-4132
Poms, 2M, 8wks, looks wht, s/w $350; Poodles Toy 2M 8wks 1 blk, 1 phantom, s/w/t/dc $400. Will meet at Shawnee. 580-665-0546 Poodles AKC Standard 7F 5M black, white, cream ready for their forever homes after March 11th. Shots, wormed, dewclaws, microchipped. $1000. 580-822-5776
Western saddle, 16" seat, high withered, full quarter horse bars, NEW, $375obo. 405-324-7411
Great Dane Pup AKC, Blue Fawn
Female, shot/dw $1000. 476-8673
Masonry Repair - All Types Since 1975 ¡ Refs ¡ 405-695-8178
Pre-Season Yard Clean-Up & Scalping 681-6764
Tuff Steel Carports & Patios,
Poodles AKC Standard 8 weeks old. 1 blk female, 2 blk males, 2 apricot males, 1 red male. UTD on shots & worming. $800 580-307-4492
Drives, Patios, All Types,
A New type TORNADO Insurance Call leave name & # 903-432-0735
Lic./Bond./Ins. Free Est. 769-3094 Tearouts/Repours, Drives, Patios, & More, Lic Ins Free Est 794-8505 Concrete Work/Driveways/Patios Lic./Bonded »» 405-301-2019 Resident'l & Comm'l. Sr. Disc. Lic./Ins. Free Est. 405-719-0793 Jim's Painting/Remodeling, int/ ext, res/com'l, insured, 314-0755.
Rat Terrier Puppies, M, will be small, $150. 405-892-7512
SHARPE'S ELECTRIC
Rott, Ger., AKC, 1M, 4F, vet ck, s/w, POP, $850. 370-2501
& Heat & Air, OKC, 341-8488.
Interior Painting, Texture, Drywall Finish, Popcorn Removal, Sr Citizen Disc, P.J. 405-664-9866
Bill's Painting & Home Repairs
Rottweilers, AKC pups, world ch, Gonnzo $500-$1000 405-227-4729
Quality Work! Free Est. 306-3087.
31 years raising quality Labs!
QUALITY FENCE, FREE EST, on new & repair, 405-317-0474.
Labradoodles
Chinese restaurant w/equipment for lease in Noble, 405-326-0888.
Labradoodles 7w, S/W, vet checked, 1M, 5F, Adorable! $400$700 405-413-7677 call/text Labradoodles, vet checked, 7 weeks, fawn M&F, black M&F $450, call or text, 405-404-4500.
Leaf/Yard Clean Up, Flower Beds, Scalping, Fencing »»» 436-3644
concrete jobs. (405) 821-1076
20x20, $1595. 799-4026/694-6109
Rat Terriers, Rare Blue Merles, 2M, 2F, $400ea. Harrah Resident 678-772-3231.
2 litters to choose from! Big thick, blocky pups! Snow white pups $900, Yellows $600 Sire & Dam are excellent water fowl or upland bird hunters, shots & wormed, eyes, hips & health grtd. Lots of references. Check us out mclemorelabradorretrievers.com or on FB. 405-933-1500
Sergio Esparza Landscape Co.
Brick & stone work. Small
Roller Pigeons, $5 each, 210-0264.
POODLES Toy CKC 1m 1f. Red & Apricot/crm $1000 405-513-3312.
LAB PUPS AKC
Cracked Mortar/Brick Repair www.precisionbrickworks.com Free estimates!(405)652-1213
QUALITY FENCE, FREE EST, on new & repair, 405-317-0474. Shidoodle Puppies: Tiny, Quality, Okemah Sunday March 12, 3pm. $500. 918-426-0169
Yorkie mix, male, lost near NW 44th & Meridian, 405-229-2998.
Shih Tzu, ACA, 1M, black and white, small, $650, 405-627-0419.
Gas, Water, Sewer lines, Hot Water Tanks. Free Est. 405-534-2374
MORGAN FENCE Co since 1940's Any type fencing/repair 921-0494
YORKIES ACA M, s/w/dc, pics avail. $300-$500 580-224-1642
Garay's Roofing/Construction
Plumbing, Paint, Any Type Home Repairs. Free Est. 405-534-2374
Labs, ACA, black, 7wks, POP, s/w, 1M, 2F, $200ea, hlth guar., 405-570-5768 No Text
Quality work, repair/replace, free est, local since 1985, 370-3572.
Home Repair & Remodel. Roofing. Siding. Free Estimate. 410-2495. Retired Contractor on SS, with 40 yrs exp, does home repairs with free est. If you don't call me we both lose money. 410-8712
350 Fine Pets At FREE TO LIVE 4mi N of Waterloo on Western ALL Dogs & Cats $80 Shts/Neut 282-8617 »» freetoliveok.org
Maltese (the ideal house pet) M/F, small, no shed, low allergy & odor, easy going & sweet & loving dogs, delivery/show room, $600-$1000, 918-694-3868.
RESIDENTIAL HAULING AND CLEANING, 765-8843.
Maltese, ACA, 1M, small & cute, $650, 405-627-0419.
Ins, Free Est, Firewood, 946-3369.
white puppies 8wks 1 M $500. 1 F $600 s/w 580-564-1560 s/w, $400, 405-361-5317.
LOOKATOKC.COM
Pro Tree Service - 1/2 off Seniors Free stump removal. 314-1313.
L&R Tree Service, Low Prices,
MALTESE ACA Beautiful snow
MORKIES, 6 weeks, adorable,
»GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100.
MINIATURE & MICRO PIG, Babies $200-$500, Pregnant Sows $500. ’ 405-481-5558 ’
Appliance & A/C Service, 27 years exper, $40 service call, 371-3049.
Firefighters Lawn Care
Quality Work ¡ Free Est 408-4478
L&R Tree Service, Low Prices,
Ins, Free Est, Firewood, 946-3369.
March 9 - March 22, 2017
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