March 22 look at okc

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LOCAL ENTERTAINMENT AND NEWS FOR PEOPLE WHO PAY ATTENTION

MARCH 22 - APRIL 4 2018 • VOL. 14 • ISSUE 6 LOOKATOKC.COM

MEET THE WEATHER STATION ON PAGE 11 | SAYING GOODBYE TO BRANDON JENKINS ON PAGE 12


FOLLOW @NATHANPOPPE ON TWITTER

from the editor

M

y boots were swimming in beer. A few songs into Miranda Lambert’s packed-out Chesapeake Energy Arena performance and row K in section 115 had already seen its fair share of spills. The former Tishomingo resident has a fun side and it attracted a rowdy crowd to the downtown Oklahoma City concert. Beers in hand, fans were ready to toast a good time. And Lambert, 34, obliged with tons of energy, a ginormous light show and a theatrical performance. Each lyric was met with a deliberate, broad gesture as if she was acting out the songs for us in a play. She sashayed across the stage with a confidence matched only by her shimmering blue top lined with copious fringe. With her backing band, I counted nine musicians onstage for the March 9 performance. Lambert was also joined by an awfully dedicated fan base. I’d

seems like a largely feminine audience. I’d wager the crowd was roughly 75 percent female. Gender aside, I found plenty of appeal in her music and recognized her ambition in sharing a double-album while delivering a stunning, road-tested “Livin’ Like Hippies” tour stop. Her fans’ appreciation spilled out along with those splashes of beer. Both her heartbreak and her enthusiasm speaks to A LOT of people. Sorta like Oklahoma’s own Wanda NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC EDITOR Jackson. The musician kicked open NPOPPE@OKLAHOMAN.COM the door for ladies who rock. It wasn’t intentional, but this issue never seen the arena so full so is full of them, too. Make sure to early before a headlining set. Now, read Brandy McDonnell’s awesome I’m late to the party when it comes cover story about Jackson and to the country superstar’s music. my review of St. Vincent’s Tulsa By the time I started paying atten- concert stop. tion, her 24-track double album I’m still trying to wrap my head Miranda Lambert and her band performs at the Chesapeake Energy “The Weight of These Wings” had around how both these amazing Arena on March 9. The “Livin’ Like Hippies Tour” marked a homecoming sold one million copies — and that’s performers got their start in Oklaof sorts for the country music superstar. She’s a former Tishomingo without persistent radio support. homa. resident. [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE] Lambert’s a beacon for what

18 | Welcome back, Annie St. Vincent’s Oklahoma concert stop was an impressive, unceasing punch to the eardrums and eye holes. Nathan Poppe shares his review.

4 | Raze and shine The largest single influx of new development in Classen-10-Penn is starting up along a four-block stretch of NW 10 just west of downtown Oklahoma City. Steve Lackmeyer has the update.

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

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[CUTLINE RETINA DISPLAY SEMIBOLD]

March 22 - April 4, 2018

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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March 22 - April 4, 2018

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CITY NEWS

U R B A N R E N E WA L

Aaron Dodson talks with an employee about the dirt work that has started at the Classen10-Penn development of land on the north side of NW 10 Street between Ellison and Brauer avenues.

ABOVE: A four-block stretch of land cleared by the city 20 years ago is being redeveloped as a mix of housing and retail on NW 10 between Ellison and Brauer avenues. [PHOTO BY DOUG HOKE]

[PHOTO BY DOUG HOKE]

The ground-floor retail planned as part of a three-story mix with apartments is shown. [IMAGE PROVIDED BY ROBERT THIBODEAU]

Apartments, town homes and retail are being built in once impoverished neighborhood BY STEVE LACKMEYER For LOOKatOKC

The largest single influx of new development in Classen-10-Penn is starting up along a four-block stretch of NW 10 just west of downtown. The raw land was acquired by the city and cleared of homes as part of a $4.5 million reconstruction of NW 10 that turned a narrow two-lane blacktop with steep hills and dangerous intersections into a four-lane divided boulevard. That street project required the city to acquire and raze about 50 homes. The land has remained empty ever since, but is now an active construction zone with the start of site work by Aaron Dodson and Venice Development. Shannon Entz, a city

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planner working with area residents as part of the Strong Neighborhoods Initiative, acknowledges the wait for development along the stretch may have been longer than once anticipated, but also believes the delay can be credited with a far better project. Early single-family home concepts came and went, while the development by Dodson is a dense mix of apartments, condominiums, retail, a pocket park and retail plaza. “Classen-10-Penn is a real estate savvy neighborhood,” Entz said. “They’re very aware and they value the desire to live downtown and in the Plaza District. We talked early on about this space. It’s been vacant for 20 years. There were several ideas thrown out early on, and fortunately they didn’t happen.”

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

‘It was pretty rough’ When Dodson first submitted his proposal to buy and develop the land from the city, the odds for success did not look as good as they do in 2018. The neighborhood was long ranked as one of the most impoverished in the city. Over the past couple of years Classen-10-Penn has seen an influx of investment and home renovations while development of Film Row and Midtown has extended west to Classen Boulevard. “It was pretty rough,” Dodson said. “But it’s cleaning up and we see people walking around in suits and ties, ladies jogging along the street.” Entz said the city might have spurned Dodson’s pitch because it was the only response to the request for proposals.

“They seemed genuinely interested in hearing the neighborhood’s opinions and ideas,” Entz said. “As our staff reviewed the numbers on the project, it seemed to work out. We had questions, but it seemed to pencil out.” Entz added Dodson and his staff incorporated details requested by the neighborhood and eventually built a report with the homebuilder who had previously invested mostly in the suburbs. Dodson agreed to exclude tenants like liquor stores and to include a bus shelter and bicycle racks. “That goes a long way,” Entz said. “A lot of times things happen to neighborhoods and not with neighborhoods.” The first phase of the development encompasses two blocks starting west

from NW 10 and Ellison Avenue. The first pad consists of 8,000 square feet of retail on the first floor with two floors above consisting of market-rate and workforce apartments. Dodson said his project is inspired by visits to Venice, California, where he saw an array of mixed-use urban development. A courtyard where Dodson envisions an outdoor eating area draped with Edison-style light strings will be created between the retail and apartment building and a nine-unit set of townhomes. “We want people to have an area where they can walk along the street, enjoy the lights, stop for a glass of wine and a slice of pizza,” Dodson said. Brauer Avenue, meanwhile, has been approved for closing so that the

stretch between the first phase and second phase of the development can be converted into a landscaped pocket park. Street parking will be added for the retail, while an alley north of the buildings will be created to provide rear parking for residents. Ed Martin with Cambridge Commercial Properties is overseeing leasing and says interest is strong for the retail and housing. Martin noted that in addition to the employee base at nearby St. Anthony Hospital, the stretch of NW 10 is surrounded by new development. “It’s all growing together,” Martin said. “We feel like this is a good time to come in with all that is going on along Classen. It’s a good area for young professionals to move in to.”

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March 22 - April 4, 2018

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FOOD

NO NAME

There’s the BEEF NoName is a good one when it comes to beef BY DAVE CATHEY For LOOKatOKC

Long before "Food Inc." and Whole Foods Market spurred nationwide interest in farm-totable concepts, Wynnewood's NoName Ranch forged a partnership with a local chef that still bears fruit even as the locavore movement ebbs. Local produce and livestock is more available to consumers now than ever; however, this market and plenty of others across the country have seen a winnowing of purveyors and facilitators of local goods. You won't find any fraying of the partnership and friendship forged between chef Kurt Fleischfresser and Wynnewood Rancher Bruce Buechner in 2001. That's when the two tallest drinks of water at a beef forum at Oklahoma State University had their first conversation, leading to a 17-year relationship that still keeps two local restaurants in quality, local beef. Whether it's a gourmet burger at Irma's Burger Shack or a tomahawk chop rib-eye high above the city at Vast, NoName beef is a signature of Fleischfresser's menus. The celebrated chef's explanation is simple: "It tastes like beef."

BREED OF KINGS In the smallish amphitheater of the Oklahoma National

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Stockyards, cattle are ushered in and out of a holding pen before bidders from across the country starting at 8 a.m. every Monday. Seated in the dimly lit gathering of cattlemen, Bruce Buechner (pronounced Beek-ner) explains how cattle of all shapes, sizes and feeding programs are purchased by feed lots from across the country, looking to fill niches within their livestock inventory. It's lots like these that supply the majority of the beef American consume, he explains. That means the beef on a given table can come from animals of various origins. That's not how things work at NoName Ranch. Starting about 7 a.m. every morning, the family begins the daily routine they must follow to ensure their Pinzgauer cattle live up to the reputation of the breed. Now in their 70s, Bruce and his wife, Joan, operate one of the country's few operations raising purebred Pinzgauer cattle from Salzburg, Austria. The auburn cattle, known for deep flavor despite being lean, feed on native unfertilized prairie hay and drink spring water. "We aren't certified organic only because the certification process would make our beef too expensive," Buechner explained. "We don't use any steroids, antibiotics, pesticides, or chemicals of any kind. Our animals eat the grass God grows in Garvin County and a little grain for finishing." Nothing is shipped, frozen or left behind with a wholesaler either. Beef goes from the ranch to a packing plant in Oklahoma City to the people who eat it. "It's just really pure beef,” Bruce Buechner said.

NoName Ranch steaks are served at Vast. [PHOTO BY JIM BECKEL]

LORD, LEAD THE WAY Life wasn't always Pinzgauers alone on the rolling prairie lands of NoName Ranch. The Buechners started selling their beef directly to private customers nearly 27 years ago, but then their main source of income came from the equine business. Back then, the Buechners, along with their daughter, Dawn Burden, would buy and sell thoroughbreds in Kentucky and made a good living for many years. They also trained mules for extra income. Tragedy changed the course of the ranch in May 1995. Shortly after a tornado damaged four outbuildings on the ranch, Dawn's son, Chad, was killed in a freak accident during the cleanup. Hauling off debris in a pickup with a couple of friends, a broken tie-rod threw them from the road. Chad Buechner was killed instantly six months before his 16th birthday. In the difficult year that

followed, the Buechners decided to concentrate on cattle. But even then, they didn't follow their typical protocol. "It was at that time that we didn't know whether we wanted to continue or not,” Bruce Buechner said. "It was the only time we've ever auctioned cattle at the Oklahoma National Stockyards." Not only had their grandson admired the Pinzgauers, but they were looking to simplify their operation. So, they sold their horses. "When we decided to quit the horse business and go to the cattle business, it was like starting all over again,” Joan Buechner said. Bruce Buechner added: "It was really scary, but we had faith in God.”

RESTAURANTTO-RANCH You'll have to forgive chef Kurt Fleischfresser if he laughs when you mention the local movement of the last decade because his

own personal local movement is going on 35 years. On the other hand, he's not unhappy how much easier it's become for him to source locally raised ingredients because for years his local mission was fraught with peril. "I've tried so many local farms and ranches, had all these agreements with different people — really nice people. Made a lot of friends," Fleischfresser said. "I used so many local producers over the years, but almost all of them eventually couldn't keep up with demand." At the forum back in 2001, Buechner spoke in his Pennsylvania Dutch accent about what he and his family refer to as the "breed of royalty" that hails from Salzburg, Austria. Buechner spoke with such authority and passion, Fleischfresser was anxious to sample the samples prepared. That came by way of dinner in Wynnewood later that year. "Do you remember what we had?" Buechner asked Fleischfresser. "Chuck roast," Fleischfresser said without hesitation. "We wanted to show the quality of the Pinzgauer by serving one of its cheapest cuts," Buechner said. "It was delicious," Fleischfresser recalled. "It just melted in your mouth. What I loved about it most, is the same thing I love about it today: It's beefiness. NoName beef tastes the way beef is supposed to taste. It has great texture, but it has that pure beef flavor."

RANCH-TOTABLE(S) On a recent afternoon, SEE BEEF, 7

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NO NAME

BEEF CONTINUED FROM 6

Buechner spent the back half of a day in the city dropping by Irma’s Burger Shack and Vast, the two places in town he knows without question he can get a quality hunk of beef cooked properly. When ordering a burger at Irma’s, he asks for it rare. Same with the steak he sampled at Vast. “They know just how I like it,” Buechner said between bites of his burger. The rancher’s lunch wouldn’t have been possible that day if he hadn’t offered the owners some free advice sometime in 2002. That was about the time Fleischfresser

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was realizing he had one very big problem with the beef he loved so much he agreed to serve it at The Coach House and The Metro. “We quickly realized that for every eight tenderloins, we had 350 pounds of hamburger,” Fleischfresser said. But Buechner had a fix. “I told them to open a burger joint!” Buechner said. The original Irma’s Burger Shack, 1035 NW 63, opened in October 2003, featuring the NoName beef burger. “As soon as we opened, it was crazy busy,” said Irma’s managing partner Linda Lee, who was born in Wynnewood. A second Irma’s opened in 2008 in the Plaza Court building. After 10 years, its future is uncertain as property values

have skyrocketed in Midtown. Lee said she has a lease through the end of July and re-upping seems unlikely now, but opined how selling enough NoName Burgers could bolster its position. About a year ago, both Irma’s locations went exclusively to NoName beef after offering it side-by-side against a standard patty for many years. “We finally decided to go with what distinguishes Irma’s from other places,” co-owner Chris Lower said. NoName beef is also prominent on the menu at Vast, which has been the case since Fleischfresser was named Chief of Culinary Operations for the Devon Tower concept in 2015. Executive chef Kevin Lee and his crew serve it various ways, but no more nobly

FOOD

or deliciously than the bone-in rib-eye. “That tomahawk chop is hard to beat,” Lee said. “We sell a lot of them.” Music to the ears of those who continue to rise with the sun, tending the herd. Ranch-to-(your)-table The Buechners still sell their Pinzgauer beef to the public by the side and halfside, but last year at the holidays they began offering gift packages ranging from $45 to $90, including various cuts. Bruce said the promotion was successful enough they intend to continue with it. For more information, contact Dawn Burden by phone or text at 580-768-1023, or email at dawn@nonameranch.net. If you would like to sample it first, drop by either Irma’s Burger Shack or make a reservation at Vast.

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

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M OV I E R E V I E W

A WRINKLE IN TIME

Disney’s

BY BRANDY MCDONNELL For LOOKatOKC

From the end of elementary school until the day I discovered “To Kill a Mockingbird” in high school, “A Wrinkle in Time” remained my favorite book. But even in sixth grade, I knew my dream of seeing it turned into a movie was unlikely to ever come true. Novelist Madeleine L’Engle’s multilayered story continually introduced strange alien worlds, fantastical creatures and scientific concepts that could seemingly never be captured on film. So, Oscar-nominated director Ava DuVernay (“Selma”) deserves kudos for turning a seemingly unfilmable book into a visually exquisite adventure that is by turns funny, exciting and thoughtful, with an inspiring message and a dynamic young heroine.

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MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

‘WRINKLE’

Reese Witherspoon, left, and Storm Reid in a scene from “A Wrinkle In Time.” [PHOTO PROVIDED BY ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA/DISNEY VIA AP]

treatment struggles to balance beloved book Storm Reid plays Meg Murry, an intelligent and awkward preteen whose adolescent years are made more torturous by the absence of her father, Alex Murry (Chris Pine), an astrophysicist who disappeared four

years ago while researching an experimental form of space travel. One day, Meg’s genius younger brother Charles Wallace (Deric McCabe) introduces Meg and their mother, fellow scientist Kate Murry (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), to a peculiar new neighbor named Mrs. Whatsit (Reese Witherspoon), who tells them that the tesseract Mr. Murry was researching is real. Mrs. Whatsit turns out to be one of a trio of celestial warriors — along with Mrs. Who (Mindy Kaling) and Mrs. Which (Oprah Winfrey), who are far more elaborately dressed than the book ever described — charged

SEE WRINKLE, 9

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A WRINKLE IN TIME

M OV I E R E V I E W ‘A WRINKLE IN TIME’ PG 1:49 ★ ★

½★

Starring: Storm Reid, Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, Mindy Kaling, Chris Pine and Gugu Mbatha-Raw. (Thematic elements and some peril).

Mindy Kaling in a scene from “A Wrinkle In Time.” [PHOTO PROVIDED BY ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA/ DISNEY VIA AP]

WRINKLE CONTINUED FROM 8 with guiding Meg, Charles Wallace and Meg’s kindly classmate Calvin (Levi Miller) on an interstellar mission to rescue Mr. Murry from a burgeoning evil force. DuVernay took on a task that must be thrilling, terrifying and thankless in adapting L’Engle’s treasured Newberry Medal-winning young-adult novel. People form such emotional bonds with beloved books, and remaining totally faithful to L’Engle’s dense story would be both impractical and ill-advised.

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Working from a script by Jennifer Lee (“Frozen”) and Jeff Stockwell (“Bridge to Terabithia”), DuVernay sticks with the basic outline of the 1962 book. But practically every character, setting and action sequence gets a substantial overhaul, and fan favorite Aunt Beast doesn’t make the cut at all. The most disruptive change, though, is to the flow of the story. L’Engle’s intergalactic coming-of-age novel possesses a sort of oddball elegance as it moves from one strange new world to the next. But the film’s narrative is choppy and graceless, with wild tonal shifts and an internal logic that too often seems faulty.

The famous scene from the book of Meg explaining the tesseract concept made the trailers but gets cut from the film, which makes the story confusing from the outset. Although Mrs. Whatsit’s transformation into a magnificent flying creature is as exhilarating and the eerily choreographed playtime on the planet Camazotz as spine-chilling as I could have hoped, my cinematic experience was a bit of a letdown. But for my 11-year-old son and 7-year-old daughter, “A Wrinkle in Time” was a thrilling cinematic voyage, one that got them excited to read my childhood favorite and keep the literary adventure going.

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

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MUSIC Q&A

TA M A R A L I N D E M A N

‘WEATHER’ UPDATE Toronto musician Tamara Lindeman talks self-titled album, being herself and CanRock BY NATHAN POPPE | LOOKatOKC Editor

T

urning 30 can be extra ordinary. Tamara Lindeman held a small birthday gathering at her house. There was a cozy fire in the songwriter’s backyard. Nothing crazy happened. But compare that to her song “Thirty,” which turns the milestone year in every (not so) young person’s life into a poetic, airy collection of revealing observations. The track, containing nearly 400 lyrics, says a lot about being a character who’s intentionally choosing not to have kids and what looking into somebody’s eyes might — or might not — amount to. In “Thirty,” something as simple as a palm on the back becomes prose. “But there in your hand was a current of life I could hardly stand / I stayed still, and I didn’t mention it, or if I did, I made some kind of joke of it,” she sings on the album standout before switching gears and using something as arbitrary as gas prices as an avenue to talk about family. The Toronto-based musician, now 33, could simply say there’s an uneasiness about turning 30, but where’s the fun in that? Lindeman has a knack for conversational verses with a lot of heart. As a youngster, she’d often walk into neighboring woods and sing to calm down. “Singing has always made me feel very much at ease, and like myself,” she told LOOKatOKC. “Often on stage, it’s the one thing that helps my nervousness. Singing is a beautiful thing to do. So human. If you learn to sing, you learn to access and express something very deep and honest within yourself. I think everyone should sing.” A lot of the songs on the former actress’ self-titled record would make sense as short stories, but you’d

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Tamara Lindeman was nominated for the 2015 Polaris Music Prize and has garnered attention from The Guardian, Pitchfork, NPR Music, Uncut and MOJO. [PHOTO PROVIDED] be missing out on her sweet, confident vocals which get a lot of fair comparisons to Joni Mitchell. She’s driven at the front seat of The Weather Station for several years now, and the project has four full-length albums under its belt. Before her first concert visit to Oklahoma, I caught up with Lindeman via email to discuss her 2017 LP, giving up acting and how you go about memorizing hundreds of lyrics.

Q:

The album opener “Free” has the fewest lyrics of any song on your self-titled record. Does that mean it was one of the quickest for you to write? Tamara Lindeman: I actually find it harder to write songs with less lyrics than more. I always want to say so much, and I need space for that — it’s so hard to cover enough ground in just a few lines. “Free” went

through many iterations — the first verse was there from the beginning, but it was hard to nail down a second verse that said everything I felt needed to be said. I had several versions of that second verse and, as I recall, that one got written at the very last moment. It seemed to work the best, though of course, it still only says half of what I wanted to say.

Q:

“The Weather Station” had more of rock aim. What musicians define that genre for you? Lindeman: When I think of rock I think of The Constantines, Joel Plaskett, Neil Young or modern pals like Jon McKiel, Alvvays or Construction & Destruction. I guess my definition of rock is actually CanRock (Canadian Rock) come to think of it. It’s not really traditional rock and roll at all. SEE Q&A, 11

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TA M A R A L I N D E M A N

MUSIC Q&A

The Weather Station performing live at the Will Rogers Theatre on Feb. 15. [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE]

Q:

Q&A

You self-produced this new record. Was that always going to be the case?

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Lindeman: At one point we were looking to work with Jeff Tweedy, and there were a few other big time producer types that people were trying to set me up with. I think in a way I’m glad none of those avenues quite worked out, so I was free to just start recording on my own terms. It was the right move and it was what I wanted to do, but it was hard for me to come right out and say that right away. I think I was just weirdly evasive until I got what I wanted.

Q:

When you performed “Thirty” for your Tiny Desk Concert at NPR’s headquarters, I learned that song has roughly 400 lyrics. How do you keep them all straight in your head? Lindeman: It’s like memorizing anything else — each passage leads into the next one. Before you know it, it’s all there in your mind. But it was absolutely a challenge in recording, when I didn’t know the songs as well as I do now, and the lyrics were still in flux — trying to get them all in my mind so I could sing them that fast was quite difficult!

LOOKATOKC.COM

Q: I liked a quote I read from you that

said acting is being someone else but music helps you be yourself. Has that sentiment changed? Lindeman: No, that’s absolutely the way it is,

for me anyways. I think when I was a teenager, I was trying to express myself through acting, and it was a really unhealthy and impossible way towards any sort of real self expression. Instead, I found that in music, and that’s been my jam ever since.

Q:

I totally remember seeing you in “Crimson Peak” for some strange reason. Any acting gigs in the works or is your focus still heavily on music? Would you ever act again? Lindeman: My focus has been on music for a long time now. It took me a long time to fully walk away from acting because the money was so good and that afforded me a lot of freedom. I pulled the plug two years ago and that felt really good. Now that I’m out, I actually can’t imagine ever doing it again.

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

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M U S I C F E AT U R E

BRANDON JENKINS

Red dirt icon

BRANDON JENKINS

remembered as a songwriter and a gentleman

Brandon Jenkins. [PHOTO PROVIDED]

BY BRANDY MCDONNELL For LOOKatOKC

W

hen singer-songwriter Brandon Jenkins took the stage, he made an impression. “Immediately, you were taken by his big voice, and he just rifled through songs one after the other,” said Ryan LaCroix, host of KOSU Radio’s “The Oklahoma Rock Show," recalling the first time he heard Jenkins play in the early

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2000s at Norman's now-closed Red Dirt Cafe. “He was a guy that always played by his own rules. … Bald head, big guy, covered in tattoos, totally an imposing figure with a strong voice, but by all accounts, a really great guy and a great friend.” Jenkins died March 2, several days after undergoing a heart operation. The Tulsa native was 48. A representative from TriStar Centennial Hospital in Nashville, Tennessee,

where the musician had the Feb. 21 surgery to replace a defective heart valve, confirmed that Jenkins died. He experienced complications during an operation and never recovered. “He was one of the most beloved people in our scene ever. There’s no doubt about it. He was our brother, man,” said John Cooper of the Stillwater band Red Dirt Rangers, who have been planning a Tulsa benefit concert for Jenkins. Jenkins became immersed in the

burgeoning red dirt scene when he attended Oklahoma State University. Along with Cody Canada, Jason Boland, Mike McClure and Stoney LaRue, Jenkins helped popularize the musical mix of country, folk and rock in Stillwater and beyond. A prolific songwriter, performer and recording artist, he released his final

SEE JENKINS, 13

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BRANDON JENKINS

M U S I C F E AT U R E

JENKINS CONTINUED FROM 13

album, “Tail Lights in a Boomtown,” on Feb. 9. “He really had an everyman kind of attitude. He grew up poor in Tulsa. That ‘Under the Shadow of the Refinery’ is not a made-up story. That’s real life. Brandon grew up in West Tulsa, and it was a hard life, a hard upbringing. And he told it in story and song," Cooper said. Featured on his 2015 album “Blue Bandana,” Jenkins’ vivid story-song “Under the Shadow of the Refinery” described what he called his “rough, raw” childhood. “That refinery was the muse for a lot of my songs,” Jenkins said in a 2015 interview with The Oklahoman. "At the same time, in the end, all those obstacles and stumbling blocks and all those things, they made me who I am and made my music what it is. Without that there wouldn't be the ‘Down in Flames' or ‘Finger on the Trigger' or a lot of those songs that touch people.” The Tulsa Central High School graduate penned some of red dirt music’s best-known songs, including the often-covered “My Feet Don’t Touch the Ground.” Cooper said he considers “Red Dirt Town,” which he penned with his bandmate Brad Piccolo and Jenkins, one of the best songs he’s ever co-written. “Billy Joe Shaver told Brandon that was one of the finest songs he’d ever heard. … He was so proud, man,” Cooper said. “Brandon always did it his way. … He remained true to what he was, which was a songwriter first and foremost. He played his songs his way.” Affectionately known as the “Red Dirt Legend,” Jenkins’ Oklahoma music roots actually were planted deep in the Tulsa Sound era: His uncle was Gordon Shyrock, a bassist and sound

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A prolific songwriter, performer and recording artist, Brandon Jenkins released his final album, “Tail Lights in a Boomtown,” on Feb. 9. [IMAGE PROVIDED]

Brandon Jenkins. [PHOTO PROVIDED BY TREVOR PAULHUS] engineer who worked with JJ Cale and Leon Russell and migrated with them to California, where he won three Grammys working as an engineer and producer for a wide range of artists, from Andrae Crouch and Elvis Presley to Natalie Cole and Dwight Yoakam. “The red dirt sound, I kind of got more in that scene when I went to college, but just because of my family, I was fully immersed in the Tulsa Sound,” Jenkins

toldThe Oklahoman in 2015. “I've traveled all over the world, and people know about Oklahoma music. It's well-respected everywhere you go — even in Texas.” “Of the second-generation of red dirt artists who came after Bob Childers and Tom Skinner and Greg Jacobs, I think Brandon Jenkins was one of the finest songwriters of the whole scene. I think he got better and better,” said Greg Johnson, owner of the

Oklahoma City listening room the Blue Door. Not only did the singer-songwriter record a live album at the Blue Door in the early 2000s, but he also played the venue’s annual Woody Guthrie tribute show several times. Jenkins made multiple appearances at the Woody Guthrie Folk Festival in Okemah, too. “I’m really sad to hear about Brandon passing. I always thought he was very talented and always a

gentleman as well. I always really enjoyed being around him,” said Terry “Buffalo” Ware, a Norman musician who annually leads the house band at the Woody Guthrie Folk Festival. Although he made frequent pilgrimages back to his home state, Jenkins lived in Austin, Texas, for more than a decade, before moving to Nashville two years ago to tap into Music City’s famed songwriter community. He was hospitalized in Nashville in early February after experiencing health problems. He took to Twitter Feb. 6 to let fans know he would be undergoing surgery to replace a defective heart valve, a genetic issue he’d unknowingly had all his life. Jenkins had planned to play the Blue Door in support of the new album in March, but after his heart surgery was scheduled, he moved the Oklahoma City date back to May. Jenkins was admitted on Feb. 21 for the procedure and never left the Nashville hospital after experiencing complications during the lengthy operation. “He was a good friend, he was a good representative of Oklahoma music, and I think he was making music for the right reasons,” Johnson said. “I hope people continue to find his music and listen to it, because that’s what it’s all about.”

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

PAGE 13


COVER STORY

WANDA JACKSON

PARTY ON BY BRANDY MCDONNELL For LOOKatOKC

For Wanda Jackson, Oklahoma has long been a convenient spot to leave from and a wonderful place to come back home to. “Oklahoma, to me, is so centrally located … that both coasts are about the same distance apart when you tour all year long. And I could go in and do an album here and there,” the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer said. “Usually a person’s hometown, they’ve seen you since you were a kid, and I’ve heard other artists say, ‘They don’t ever want to come out to my shows because they watched me grow gro up.’ But Oklahoma has always supported me. They’ve always been behind me and happy for every accomplishment that I get get.” Known for more than t six decades as “The Queen of Rockabilly,” Jackson, 80, achieved anoth another distinguished milestone last month when she was crowned an Oklahom Oklahoma Cultural Treasure at the 2018 Governor’s Arts Awards ceremony. The two-time Gra Grammy nominee is just the 13th recipient of the Oklahoma Cultural Treasure de designation, said Oklahoma Arts Council Executive Director Amber Sharples Sharples. “She has really b been a catalyst and has been instrumental in changing the course of rockabilly rocka and rock ‘n’ roll music and a trailblazer for female musicians,” Sharple Sharples said. “We might not have had the Reba McEntires and Carrie Underwoods or the other artists that are working in this area had it not been for Wanda leading the way.” MUSICAL FIRST

American rockabilly singer Wanda Jackson shortly before her first performance over television in Tokyo in 1959. [AP PHOTO/AKIO MURAKAMI]

The governor an and state Arts Council may designate a person an Oklahoma Cultural Trea Treasure if that individual is considered “especially precious or valuable by a particular period, class, community or population.” The honoree must b be at least 70 years old, a “bearer of intangible cultural assets” and have ou outstanding artistic or historical worth. Previous recipien recipients include visual artists Ed Ruscha, Wilson Hurley and Charles Banks Wilso Wilson; historian and author John Hope Franklin; novelist and poet N. Scott Moma Momaday; storyteller Te Ata; and Oklahoma’s five American Indian prima balleri ballerinas. “Ed Ruscha, for example, who was the most recent Cultural Treasure, when we asked him about musicians from Oklahoma, or artists from Oklahoma, that influence influenced him, he even mentioned Wanda Jackson as being pivinspiratio otal as an inspiration,” Sharples said. “Whenever someone of that caliber is recognizing that a artist for their influence, I think that’s probably the (big-

SEE WANDA, PAGE 16 Page 14

March 22 - April 4, 2018

LOOKATOKC.COM


WANDA

WANDA JACKSON

COVER STORY

Oklahoma’s own Wanda Jackson reflects on her ongoing career and cultural treasure status

My folks would tell me that when I was about 6 and people would ask me, ‘What are you gonna be when you grow up?’ I always said, ‘a girl singer.’ ” – WANDA JACKSON

Wanda Jackson performs during The Americana Music Awards at The Ryman Auditorium, in Nashville in 2010. [AP PHOTO/JOSH ANDERSON]

LOOKATOKC.COM

March 22 - April 4, 2018

Page 15


COVER STORY

WANDA JACKSON WANDA, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 14 gest) compliment of all.” Although 1995 honoree Doc Tate Nevaquaya was both a Comanche visual artist and flutist, Sharples said Jackson is the first mainstream musician to receive the designation. “We’re trying to broaden the conversation about the arts, all the different disciplines and genres that make up the cultural wealth of our state. The individuals who we’re recognizing obviously influenced Oklahoma, but they’ve really influenced beyond — they’ve really influenced the nation. They have had an impact on who we are as a state, have drawn from their roots of being from Oklahoma, but they’ve also had an impact on the national and international stage,” she said. “As the state of Oklahoma, the Oklahoma Arts Council, we want to recognize … how she laid the foundation for the music we hear today.” TRAILBLAZING ARTIST Although she’s no stranger to musical firsts, the longtime Oklahoma City resident said she’s wowed to become the first musician named a state Cultural Treasure. “I don’t really have the words for it, I’m just awed. When I think of Woody Guthrie and … the great talent that has come out of Oklahoma, then for them to select me, it’s just awesome,” Jackson said. “I’m very Wanda Jackson and Elvis Presley grateful, and I’ll do my best to see that in the mid-1950s. Oklahoma continues to be proud of me.” A Maud native, Jackson launched her musical career while still a student at Capitol Hill High School in Oklahoma City, when country musician Hank Thompson heard her singing on a local radio station. When “You Can’t Have My Love,” her 1954 duet with Thompson’s bandleader, Billy Gray, cracked the top 10 on the country charts, Jackson hoped his label, Capitol Records, would sign her. But she was told that “Girls don’t sell records.” Undeterred, she signed with Decca Records instead. “My folks would tell me that when I was about 6 and people would ask me, ‘What are you gonna be when you grow up?’ I always said, ‘a girl singer.’ And so that’s been my goal, and I was able to obtain it as a young girl, teenager, and still I’m just passionate about it,” she said. After high school, with her father managing her, she started touring, playing package shows with Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Elvis Presley, who gave Wanda his ring and asked her to be “his girl.” With the future King’s encouragement, the Oklahoma native began applying her uniquely growling voice to an early style of rock ‘n’ roll called rockabilly. She became the first women to ever record rock ‘n’ roll with her 1958 single “Let’s Have a Party,” and she performed in glamorous fringed outfits her mother designed. “I didn’t know I was setting a trend or blazing a trail at the time, so it’s very nice to have these young singers come up to me and say, ‘If I hadn’t heard your song, I probably wouldn’t be a singer today,’ ” Jackson said. “Cyndi Lauper, it was so sweet, when she met me she took a hold of my hand and kissed it and then she looked at me and tears were running down her face. I said, ‘What’s wrong, honey? What’s wrong?’ She said, ‘Oh, I’m just so happy to … get to meet you because you have helped all the girls in this business so much.’ So, it’s always a very nice thing for someone to appreciate what you’ve done.” LONGTIME PERFORMER

Wanda Jackson performs during the 2009 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in 2009 in Cleveland. [AP Photo/Tony Dejak]

Page 16

March 22 - April 4, 2018

Local Americana singer-songwriter Carter Sampson said she had a plane ticket

LOOKATOKC.COM


WANDA JACKSON

COVER STORY

Wanda Jackson performs live at OKCFest in 2015. [PHOTOS BY NATHAN POPPE] booked to visit family in California when she got the call inviting her to perform one of Jackson’s songs at the February ceremony. “I changed my ticket. It was like, ‘I can’t not be there for that,’ ” Sampson said. “What’s cool, too, is to listen to the rockabilly stuff and she has that crazy awesome growl and all this attitude, and then the country songs are heartbreaking country songs like they should be, and then all of her gospel stuff … is awesome.” Sampson said she couldn’t pick just one Wanda Jackson song, so she selected a pair of country tunes: the honky-tonk heartbreaker “Tears Will Be the Chaser for Your Wine” and the uproarious “Big Iron Skillet.” Sampson also played her own song “Queen of Oklahoma” in honor of the “Queen of Rockabilly.” “She’s just been a role model for me … from when she was making it happen for herself as a teenager and staying in front of the business side of it and not getting taken advantage of and standing strong in what she believed in to being now a sassy old lady on stage,” Sampson said, remembering when she shared the bill with Jackson and fellow Oklahomans John Moreland and Parker Millsap a few years ago at AmericanaFest in Nashville, Tenn. “She was backstage with her little walker with her tennis balls on it, and then she got on stage, they had a stage walker for her that had fringe on the front. … I feel like the more I learn about her and the more I listen to her, the more I love her. It’s a big honor to get to sing a Wanda Jackson song to Wanda Jackson.” OKLAHOMA LOVE Although she has been named a Cultural Treasure, Jackson isn’t a dusty relic sitting on Carter Sampson a shelf. The still-sassy singer joked with Gov. [PHOTO PROVIDED] Mary Fallin at the Governor’s Art Awards that she expected “The Guardian” statue atop the Capitol to come down and a picture of her to go up, complete “with the fringe flying and the guitar.” Jackson continues to perform across North America, including a near-sellout hometown concert Feb. 17 at Tower Theatre. Her daughter, Gina Simpson, walked her to her seat on the stage and gave her a kiss before the legend dubbed “The Sweet Lady with the Nasty Voice” began singing, storytelling and even yodeling. “I was always pretty feisty on the stage, and now my legs just won’t stand there an hour anymore. I was worried about having to sit … and I’m actually having fun with it. Just see what all I can do while I’m sitting,” Jackson said. With the help of her daughter, as well as her granddaughter, Jordan Simpson, Jackson was able to start performing again after her husband, Wendell Goodman, who managed

Wanda Jackson [PHOTO PROVIDED]

her career for 55 years, died last year. The singer released her autobiography “Every Night Is Saturday Night: A Country Girl’s Journey to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame,” penned with Scott B. Bomar, in the fall, and she appeared at a master class and book signing March 15 at the ACM@UCO Performance Lab. “It’s just what I do, and I’m just fortunate that in this job that I can keep going as long as my health holds up and my voice,” Jackson said. “I can continue working, and my fans are so wonderful. They just pour the love on me. When I’m on the stage, I just feel waves of love hitting me, and it’s just very reassuring and makes me know I’m still here for some reason.” Along with receiving the National Endowment for the Arts’ National Heritage Fellowship Award in 2005 and membership in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2009, Jackson said she treasures the honors from her home state: her 2000 induction into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame and 2014 entrance into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame, the dedication of streets named after her in Maud and OKC, and now the designation as an Oklahoma Cultural Treasure. “Years ago, I got one of my first awards from Oklahoma that was called a Native Daughter. … and I’m still very proud of that one. It sits on my piano,” she said. “Oklahoma is just doing so much for me and always has. … It’s a love affair.” Contributing: Nathan Poppe


CONCERT REVIEW

S T. V I N C E N T

Tulsa-based St. Vincent performed solo, but she’s far from alone BY NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC Editor

C

alling this concert a high-wire act is too silly. And reductive. What St. Vincent did that Monday night in Tulsa — or as she called it, her “OG hometown” — had all the qualities of a controlled, fine-tuned gymnastics performance but it was far weirder and had a much headier soundtrack. Any other concert at the spacious Brady Theater probably could be compared to a basketball game. Sometimes just one Russell Westbrook-level star shines in a group, but it remains a team sport. Annie Clark’s “Fear the Future Tour” is the opposite — a solo extravaganza. The Oklahoma-born artist was SEE ST. VINCENT, 19

PAGE 18

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

The crowd reacts to St. Vincent performing live at Tulsa’s Brady Theater on Feb. 26. The “Fear the Future Tour” stop was a homecoming performance for the Oklahoma-born rocker. [PHOTOS BY NATHAN POPPE]

LOOKATOKC.COM


S T. V I N C E N T

ST. VINCENT CONTINUED FROM 18 totally alone onstage if you don't count a couple roadies dressed as riot police and an opening set from Tuck & Patti, Clark's jazzy aunt and uncle. St. Vincent's solitary gig was an impressive, unceasing punch to the eardrums and eye holes. It's a sensory bombardment

LOOKATOKC.COM

on all fronts thanks to a Jumbotron so big the show relocated from Cain's Ballroom, costume changes and a feverish pacing. Pardon all the basketball metaphors, but St. Vincent's show resembled an endless alley-oop to herself. She repeatedly grabbed a freshly tuned guitar, synced up with an invisible band and made her instrument squeal. Here's a quick list of

things her guitar sounded like instead of a guitar: a panicked killer whale, a NASCAR race in reverse, a heartbroken tornado siren, a lonely satellite lost in space and a menacing circular saw colliding with a Lowe's appliance aisle. These noises became all the more vivid and unsettling the closer I huddled to the crowded general admission pit blocking the view of the seated crowd. Half an hour behind

schedule, Clark's St. Vincent persona arrived fashionably late. Her skintight pink ensemble glimmered in all its latex glory. Her wardrobe was fierce yet deliberate, like every blinding stage light, booming backing track and piece of choreography. I could see why I was instructed to not set my camera onstage, it wouldn't have stood a chance against those stilettos. That's one of the most

CONCERT REVIEW

fascinating things about St. Vincent: She always seems in control. And who better — or more mesmerizing — can drive an entire concert? Clark divided her exceptionally entertaining display of art pop pageantry into two 45-minute acts. The first was a trip through her back catalog, which was odd because most musicians seem to close sets with familiar tunes.

Only a sliver of the stage curtain opened before St. Vincent first emerged, gripping a microphone like a sandwich that owed her money. Her body was cemented, and her face delivered the dramatic weight of the opening ballad "Marry Me." Her mouth contorted with the exit of every lyric. As if each word was getting a personal goodbye SEE ST. VINCENT, 20

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

PAGE 19


CONCERT REVIEW

S T. V I N C E N T

St. Vincent performs live at Tulsa’s Brady Theater on Feb. 26. The “Fear the Future Tour” stop was a homecoming performance for the Oklahoma-born rocker. [PHOTOS BY NATHAN POPPE]

ST. VINCENT CONTINUED FROM 19 with the exit of every lyric. As if each word was getting a personal goodbye before her cheek got pulled sideways by an imaginary fishing line. After three songs,

PAGE 20

she finally spoke to the crowd and acknowledged her Tulsa roots. But not everyone was into the homecoming celebration. I overheard a confused security guard asking what type of music St. Vincent played. A row of fans tossed out genres but hesitated after each description — likely in

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

fear of veering off course and having their fandom questioned. It’s a lot easier to say what Clark isn’t. She’s not boring. Again, I can’t think of any other artist I’d want to see perform totally alone to digital accompaniment. I’m unsure exactly why she’s going this tour

alone, but it’s no less entertaining. She’s also not afraid to get intimate with her audience. “Thank you, Tulsa,” she said. “This next song is for all the boys. And for all the girls. And for whoever doesn’t fit neatly into those categories.”

Then she ripped into “Sugarboy,” a song Clark called “an exhilarating tug of war” between her and her audience. And how fitting because Clark’s the king of self-possession, a space queen and everything in between when her creativity commands a stage. Without a backing

band, there was almost no air between songs. She only took a break for a brief intermission, which lasted a couple of minutes. Dazzling, highquality videos started playing behind St. Vincent as she began a second act that pulled SEE ST. VINCENT, 21

LOOKATOKC.COM


S T. V I N C E N T

ST. VINCENT CONTINUED FROM 20 from her 2017 album, “Masseduction.” The sultry videos featured bizarre imagery — like a home telephone with a receiver

LOOKATOKC.COM

made of cake and so many butts — and made me wish “50 Shades of Grey” producers had called Clark first. She’s a filmmaker, too, after all, and her contribution to the horror anthology film “XX” was hanging at the merch booth. It’s impressive how

much of the evening was both creepy and alluring. Even if those visuals weren’t your cup of tea, it was still hard to look away unphased. Her playing never faulted, and her vocals never cracked during the pitch-perfect performance. As deadly serious as she

looked during much of the set, Clark got exceptionally tender during “Happy Birthday, Johnny” and added a comical bend to the night. For the song “New York,” she Weird Al’d it with an Okie twist. “Tulsa isn’t Tulsa without you, love / So far in a few

CONCERT REVIEW

blocks from Mazzio’s / To be on Brookside / And if I call you from Oral Roberts University ...” She paused. “I should’ve thought more about that rhyme scheme,” she said before dropping a quick Golden Hurricane reference. It was my first time

seeing Clark live, and it was fun to see her embrace her Oklahoma side. I’m sure she does that lyric twist to every city, but it felt endearing. She often claims Texas as her home, but the roughly 1,500 fans in attendance gladly reclaimed the star for a night.

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

PAGE 21


MUSIC

NETFLIX N TRILL

OKC rapper WoRm serves up ‘Netflix N Trill’ single

Single artwork for “Netflix N Trill.” [IMAGE PROVIDED]

Oklahoma City-based rapper Sherman Johnson performs under the moniker WoRm. He’s prepping the release of his fourth studio album, “To-Go Plate.” [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE]

BY NATHAN POPPE LOOKatOKC Editor

S

herman Johnson can cook up beats just about as easily as breakfast. The Oklahoma City-based rapper and recording engineer works out of an apartment that doubles as a studio. His fridge sits only a few feet away from his computer and his sofa is the artist lounge. “I’ve been making music since high school. I would always be making music in my room,” Johnson said. “This apartment is a step up for me! “I’ve gotten used to it. I’ve been

PAGE 22

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

blessed to not get any complaints of loud music from any of my neighbors.” Those residents might not be aware they’re sharing space with WoRm. That’s Johnson’s hip-hop moniker, and it’s a fitting name when you think about where his songs will burrow. Check out the debut of “Netflix N Trill,” the first earworm off of his upcoming full-length album, “To-Go Plate.” “Man, this song has been through a lot,” Johnson said in email exchange with LOOKatOKC. “I was searching through a YouTube playlist of neo-soul songs and came across an artist named Conya Doss. I’d never heard of her and

liked her music. I went through a majority of her songs to find something to sample.” If WoRm, 23, hasn’t heard of you then there’s a good chance you haven’t been sampled yet. He fell in love with the track’s synth sounds and paired it with a new beat. WoRm’s friend and fellow rapper Tony LeSure, also known as L.T.Z., later joined the song. “I made this beat around the time of Tony’s album ‘Sophisticated Slabs,’ but I was like, ‘This is mine.’ Tony wanted to hop on, and he sounded good on it,”

WoRm said. “I showed it to him after I recorded my verses and he was like, ‘Got it!’ Then he spit the hook.” “Netflix N Trill” went through even more changes during the course of 2017. WoRm added a fresh baseline to compliment the lyrical track. Johnson’s eyeing a May release date for his fourth studio record, which features a mountain of Oklahoma-based talent that WoRm produced for the new collection. “To-Go Plate” features General J-poe, Grand National, Ashlee Watkins, Peyton Benge, Marrell Jones and more. SEE TRILL, 23

LOOKATOKC.COM


NETFLIX N TRILL

MUSIC REVIEW

TRILL CONTINUED FROM 22 “I had about 20 tracks once I was finished with ‘To-Go Plate,’ Johnson said. “Most of the tracks I did by myself were a lot more selfreflective. I decided to save them for a more personal album and pick up where ‘Chicken N Waffles’ left off. “This album is full of jams, hits and fun songs. The ones that didn’t make it are a little more serious and will be saved for later.” Consider those songs as leftovers that’ll be put to good use.

L.T.Z. performs live at the Tower Theatre in 2017. [PHOTO BY NATHAN POPPE]

LOOKATOKC.COM

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

PAGE 23


B R I C K U N I V E R S E | C OX C O N V E N T I O N C E N T E R

9 A.M.

APRIL 7 & 8

The Cox Convention Center, 1 Myriad Gardens, will host BrickUniverse LEGO Fan Convention on April 7-8. Last year, thousands of Lego fans showed up to enjoy live Lego builds, the Building Zone with thousands of Lego bricks for attendees to build with, and select galleries of amazing and life-size Lego models. Attractions include cities and trains, architecture build zone, challenge zone, massive displays, fan zone and more. Admission is $15. Go online to www.brickuniverse.com/okc for tickets and information.

‘ 4 0 M I N U T E S O R L E S S : M OV I N G M I X E D M E D I A’ | [ A R T S PA C E ] AT U N T I T L E D

6 T O 7 : 3 0 P. M .

MARCH 29

[Artspace] at Untitled, 1 NE 3 in Deep Deuce, will present the second installment of “40 Minutes or Less” at 6 to 7:30 p.m. March 29 with Emmy Awardwinning Director Kyle Roberts, owner of Reckless Abandonment Pictures. Whether you’re a film expert or simply seeking alternatives to standard movie theater blockbusters, all types of viewers are encouraged to attend to enjoy an evening of film and conversation. The event is free and open to the public. Go to www.1ne3.org, or call 815-9995 for information. RIGHT: Kyle Roberts, left

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MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

LOOKATOKC.COM


EGG HUNT 5K | LAKE HEFNER

10 A.M. TO NOON

MARCH 31

The inaugural Egg Hunt 5K is set for 10 a.m. to noon March 31 at Stars and Stripes Par, 3701 Lake Hefner Drive. The race features an officially timed run with an egg hunt along the course. Each egg collected will represent time taken off the runner’s official race time. Those who find golden eggs will win a prize. This race includes the timing chip and bib, finisher medal, fanny pack for collecting eggs and water bottle. This event also features a half-mile Kids Bunny Hop egg hunt for kids ages 6-12 and a traditional “Tiny Tot” egg hunt, which will begin at 9:15 a.m. Admission is $35 for the 5K and $5 for the children’s egg hunts. For information and registration, go to www.parks.okc.gov or call 297-2279.

C E D R I C ‘ T H E E N T E R TA I N E R ’ | T O W E R T H E AT R E

7 P. M .

MARCH 31 AND APRIL 1

Actor and comedian, Cedric “The Entertainer” will appear at 7 p.m. March 31 and April 1 at the Tower Theatre, 425 NW 23. Cedric is best known for his performances in films and television shows such as “Barbershop”; “Be Cool” with John Travolta; “Intolerable Cruelty” with George Clooney; “Madagascar;” and “The Original Kings of Comedy,” MTV’S documentary directed by Spike Lee, which captured the phenomenon of the record-breaking “Kings of Comedy Tour.” All ages show. Minors must be accompanied by an adult. Admission is $45.50 to $58. Go online to www. towertheatreokc.com for tickets and information.

LOOKATOKC.COM

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

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MUSIC

Z O O A M P T O W E L C O M E P E N TAT O N I X , S L AY E R T O U R S

MARCH 23: Jeezy, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 23: Kyle Reid and the Low Swingin’ Chariots, Blue Door. 24: Hot Club of Cowtown, Jacob Tovar, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 26: Sylvan Esso, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 31: Martin Sexton, Opolis. (Norman)

Pentatonix

APRIL 2: Dweezil Zappa, Tower Theatre. 6: Chelsey Cope album release with Twiggs, Husbands,

Opolis. (Norman) 6: Metro Music Fest featuring The Revolution, Mavis Staples, Bricktown. 6-7: SWOSUpalooza featuring Stoney LaRue, Ben Rector, Pioneer Cellular Event Center. (Weatherford) 8: Low Cut Connie, Tower Theatre Studio. 7: Reverend Horton Heat, Tower Theatre. 11: John Moreland, Deer Tick, Diamond Ballroom. 12: Erika Wennerstrom, Beau Jennings and the Tigers, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 12: John Moreland, Deer Tick, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 13: Red City Radio EP release, Tower Theatre. 13-14: Tribute to Joni Mitchell, Blue Door. 15: Nick Swardson, Criterion. 16: Drake Bell, 89th Street. 19: Tedeschi Trucks Band, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 20: Michael Fracasso, Blue Door. 21: Jay Leno, WinStar World Casino. (Thackerville) 21: Calexico, Vanguard. (Tulsa) 22: Bowling For Soup, Tower Theatre. 24: Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 24-29: The Book of Mormon, Civic Center Music Hall. 25: David Byrne, Criterion. 26: Jonathan Davis, Diamond Ballroom. 26: Of Montreal, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 26-28: Norman Music Festival, Downtown. (Norman) 27: Foreigner, Riverwind Casino. (Norman) 29: Vance Joy, Criterion. 29: Steve Poltz, Blue Door.

M AY 1: Ben Folds, Civic Center Music Hall. 2: U2, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 4-5: Parker Millsap, Sooner Theatre. (Norman) 5: Justin Timberlake, BOK Center. (Tulsa) 5: Beach House, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 8: Primus, Mastodon, Criterion. 9: Peelander-Z, NET, Mercury Lounge. (Tulsa) 10: Dr. Dog, Cain’s Ballroom. (Tulsa) 10: Modest Mouse, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 11: Papa Roach, Brady Theater. (Tulsa) 12: Stone Sour, Diamond Ballroom. 12: Squirrel Nut Zippers, Vanguard. (Tulsa)

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MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

J U LY 2 4 A N D A U G . 1 6 Tickets recently went on sale for two hotly anticipated concert tours coming this summer to the Zoo Amphitheatre, 2101 NE 50th St. Three-time Grammy-winning vocal group Pentatonix, which includes former University of Oklahoma student Kirstin Maldonado, will embark in July on a 39-city North American tour produced by Live Nation. The tour will hit Oklahoma City on July 24. The multiplatinum-selling a cappella act will be touring in support of its new album, “PTX Presents: Top Pop, Vol. I,” due out April 13 via RCA Records. OKC tickets are on sale and will be available at Buy For Less, Uptown Grocery and Smart Saver; by phone at 800-514-3849; and online at www.ptxofficial.com and www.dcfconcerts.com. By popular demand, Slayer announced this week a second North American leg of its final world tour, which will travel to 20 cities From left, Slayer is Paul Bostaph, Tom Araya, Gary Holt and Kerry King. [PHOTO PROVIDED] starting in July. The two-time Grammywinning metal band’s trek will stop at the Zoo Amphitheatre on Aug. 16. Lamb of God, Anthrax, Testament and Napalm Death will accompany Slayer on all dates. OKC tickets are on sale and will be available online at www.zooampokc.com, by phone at 800-514-3849 and at Buy For Less and Uptown Grocery stores. — Brandy McDonnell, for LOOKatOKC

LOOKATOKC.COM


D R E A M AC T I O N O K L A H O M A RA L L E Y | S KY DA N C E B R I D G E

SHOTS

Yovana Medina listens at a Dream Action Oklahoma rally with immigrant youth.

Jose Rodriguez, left, and Aime Quintana LEFT: Dream Action Oklahoma rally with immigrant youth, allies and supporters meet.

[PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE, F O R L O O K AT O KC ]

LOOKATOKC.COM

MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

PAGE 27


SHOTS

RIGHT: Aime Quintana tells her story on March 5 at a Dream Action Oklahoma rally with immigrant youth, allies and supporters met at the SkyDance Bridge to share stories of Oklahomans affected by Congress’ inaction on a solution for DACA recipients and immigrant youth.

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MARCH 22–APRIL 4, 2018

D R E A M AC T I O N O K L A H O M A RA L L E Y | S KY DA N C E B R I D G E

ABOVE: Yovana Medina, left, gives support to Aime Quintana as she shares her story. LEFT: Supporters listen at a Dream Action Oklahoma rally.

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1967 Mustang 289 Auto

2008 Ford Edge SEL, loaded, lthr, non smoker, $8300, 498-3777.

2013 LS 460 Sport, AWD, 77K mi, 1 owner, $29,000 ‘ 405-620-6393 2009 Chevy Silverado LT crew cab clean, $13,990, 405-498-3777. 2005 Town Car Signature, 141K, new tires, loaded $6500, 613-4482 '90 Linc. Town Car, 1 owner, looks runs, drives new $4500. 412-5216

'06 Chevy Avalanche, clean, rebuilt title, $5,900. 326-8855

2003 Ford Expedition EB pkg fully loaded $3950 863-6399

$7500 or best offer 405-708-9121.

1964 Dodge Dart, 2 door,

project car, $1800, 405-651-8248.

CASH FOR CARS Running Or Not. 405-512-7278.

1961 Lincoln Continental Great car with suicide doors.38,928 miles $37,500, 956-802-7397

2000 Grand Marquis, very clean & dependable, $2200, 962-8424.

2010 ALTIMA 2.5S 4 door

silver, 77,400 mi asking $5390 (KBB is $7226) 405-414-6325 2014 AQ5, exc cond, 39K miles, sunroof, $26,999, 405-721-3364.

2010 Dodge Dakota Bighorn crew cab, loaded, $11,900, 498-3777.

2015 Impala, 59K miles, $11,890 1 owner. » » » 405-795-9911 2011 Impreza WRX, 112K, great cond, loaded, $11,799, 406-0237.

'05 PT Cruiser, 4cyl, 5spd, cd gas saver, 68K, $2750. 863-6399

DCL OPEN CAR SHOW Sat. March 24th, 8-1, 3925 SE 29th. Pancake Breakfast Contact Delane @ 361-2148.

$$$ CLASSICS WANTED $$$

2005 Ford F150 Lariat Crew Cab, lthr, $7,900. 405-818-6554

2009 Tiguan, 65K mi, extra clean, non smoker, $9500, 498-3777.

2016 Durango SUV Limousine

160", 14 passenger, 11,500 miles, loaded, $68,750 » 405-795-9911

LOOKATOKC.COM

WANTED: 1935 Oklahoma auto license plate. Will pay $100 for good example. Send your contact information to bert@albaton.com.

Yamaha Super Tenere Motorcycle This 1200cc Super Tenere adventure tour motorcycle is in great shape and ready to take you anywhere you want to to. It has near new tires and many extras. It is adult owned and never damaged. For more information or to see call 405-365-7054 in Norman, Ok. $7800. 1994 Harley Davidson Heritage Softail nostalgia, lots of chrome, 27K mi, $5500, 580-233-8082.

2012 Keystone Montana Hickory 3625RE 5th Wheel REDUCED! Non-smker, Gr8 flr plan w/ ALL comforts, selfleveling, 4 slides, 2 a/c's, gas/ elec, 50/30 amp, 4 dr. fridge, elec. awning, wsher/dryr hkup, am/fm/ cd, fireplace, cent vac, 2 tvs, dvd plyr, microw, range/oven, plush kg bd, EXCELLENT CONDITION! $30,900.00 580-320-1062 Or 580-332-8337

2007 Jetta, auto, a/c, loaded, good cond, clean, $5400, 498-3777

2002 Mustang, auto, 99K miles, good cond, clean, $5200, 498-3777

Adjunct 3D Printing Instructor

www.mntc.edu/about-mntc/ employment-opportunities Mt St Mary Catholic High School Seeking the following positions for the 18-19 school year: F/T 9th grade Counselor, Ok. SDE certified. F/T Facilities Manager/School Resource Officer. Please email Talita DeNegri at tdenegri@mountstmary.org, or fax letter of interest/resume to 405-631-9209. EOE. 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 405631-9209 or email tdenegri@mountstmary.org. EOE

2007 GMC Canyon SLE, 136,798 miles, 5cyl, hard Tonneau cover, good cond., $6,950. 405-693-5166

$ 405-501-0101 $

2014 Racing Convertible Mini Cooper 6500miles, Collector's Car $48,250 » » » 405-795-9911

www.mntc.edu/about-mntc/ employment-opportunities

2000 Dodge Ram

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

running or not, Porsche, Jaguar, Mercedes, Rolls Royce, Ferrari, and much more. Fast & easy transaction. Cash on the spot. If you have any of these, or any other old foreign cars sitting around, please call 703-819-2698.

Quality Services Specialist

2010 Ford F150, 4.6L, 66K miles, exc cond, $10,999, 405-640-7180.

Tow Dolly (Demco), Kar Kaddy, spare tire, kept inside, good cond, $850 obo, OKC area, 405-650-8957

Looking to buy an old foreign project car in any condition,

Part time Admin. Asst.

for NW OKC Attorney. Experience with MS Word & Outlook. Email resume & salary history to sguest@nashfirm.com

Quad Cab nice $4950 863-6399

UP TO $10,000 for Cars Run/Not, Wrecked Free Tow 405-788-2222

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

1975 Glastron, 85hp motor, all fish & boat equipment, runs & looks great, $1100, 405-343-6840.

2005 Dodge Ram V8 loaded pwr good work trk $3250 863-6399 2002 Aztec SUV, 4 cylinder, good condition, $2495, 405-402-0441.

$ WE PAY CASH $

2004 Ford Escape, auto, sunroof, good condition, $3990, 498-3777.

2015 Chevy Suburban, 54,444 miles, $37,750 » 405-795-9911

2002 Fleetwood Bounder 36 Ft. Many new,extra, and updated features. $22,000 405-329-8862

Asset Recovery Agency seeking

Collectors. Salary + bonus. Call 405-943-9608, ask for hiring manager.

Seeking Part-Time Experienced R.N./L.P.N. OKC Oncology Practice seeking part-time experienced R.N. or L.P. N. for office nurse position. Current Oklahoma licensure required. Medical office experience preferred. Resumes: windy.nunnery@csok.org

March 22 - April 4, 2018

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Housekeeper/Laundry Needed for hotel room cleaning. Good Pay. Apply in Person 7400 S. May Ave, OKC 73159

The City of Moore

is accepting applications for

RECREATION PROGRAM ASSISTANT

For MQs, salary, and application go to www.cityofmoore.com/jobs Deadline for submission of all required material is March 23, 2018. City of Moore 301 N Broadway Moore, OK 73160

SKILLED LABORERS

needed with valid driver's license. Please apply at: 3216 SE 30th St, Del City. Great opportunity with growing company!

Page 30

March 22 - April 4, 2018

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LOOKATOKC.COM

March 22 - April 4, 2018

Page 31


151± ACRES * MAJOR COUNTY * OKLAHOMA * ISABELLA AREA *GRASS PASTURE * CATTLE EQUIPMENT

ABSOLUTE AUCTION

No Minimum - No Reserve Live Off-site Auction with Online bidding Auction Location: 720 Park Lane Major County Fairgrounds, Exhibit Bldg, Fairview, OK 73737

Wednesday, March 28 - 10 am

LandBuzz.com 580-237-7174

BRICK HOME * 2013 NISSAN * FORD * FURNITURE * HOUSEHOLD MISC * LAWN/SHOP/ MISC * ENID OK

ESTATE AUCTION

1406 Gannon Ave, Enid, OK

Sat., March 31 - 10 AM LandBuzz.com 580-237-7174

I BUY & SELL HOUSES 27 YRS EXP 650-7667 HOMESOFOKCINC.COM

5940 NW 40th. Large 2bd, $525 mo, $300 dep, no Sec 8 470-3535

TOP LOCATION!

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

PRIME DEVELOPMENT SITE

U.S. GOVERNMENT SEEKING AVAILABLE OFFICE SPACE OKLAHOMA CITY, OK Need minimum of 2,041 square feet to a maximum 2,450 square feet of professional office space to be utilized as a military recruiting office for the US Navy. The delineated area is as follows: •North Boundary-14th St. •West Boundary-N Western Ave •East Boundary-N Oklahoma Ave •South Boundary - NW 5th St

2-10 acre tracts, E of I-35 & NE 63rd, paved roads, small pond, 405-651-8248.

Tulsa District, US Army Corps of Engineers, ATTN: CESWT-RE-A, 2488 E. 81st Street, Tulsa, OK 74137-4290. Point of Contact: Rhonda Sallee, 918-669-7695 Rhonda.M.Sallee@usace.army.mil

7.5 Acres with pond

corner lot close to Edmond & Arcadia, need to sell soon. 405-881-7700 405-558-0934

140 acres, Newcastle, $9,000 per acre, 8" water line, 405-406-0076.

Space is required for occupancy by September 30, 2018.

Paint and Body Repair Shop for sale. In business for 50 yrs. Potential buyer must pre-qualify and sign confidentiality agreement. To buy or sell a business call 405-590-2117. For Sale or Rent lrg 3bd home, lrg shop. Open house Mar 17-18 from 2-5. 405-321-7843/405-317-0645

SMALL BUSINESS/STORAGE 1250sf, 25'x50', O/H door $600mo 8701 S I-35, OKC 631-8988 (Mike)

E of OKC, pay out dn. Many choices mobile home ready. Call for maps TERMS 275-1695 www.paulmilburnacreages.com

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March 22 - April 4, 2018

LEASE TO OWN

11606 Elora Circle, Blanchard 11646 Elora Circle, Blanchard Equal Housing Opportunity Text 405-996-7368.

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.

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

Quiet Casady! 1bd & 2bd

One Month FREE!!

751-8088

EDMOND OFFICE SPACE One Room or Two Room Suites

MAYFAIR great historic loc, sec./quiet 1 & 2 beds 947-5665

All Utilities Paid by Owner Call Broker/Owner Pete Reeser 405-410-9001 / 405-726-9224

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

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

1 & 2 Bedroom 946-9506

At 30 E. Campbell

Putnam Heights Plaza 800 N Meridian

LOOKATOKC.COM


NANTUCKET, 3200 W Britton Rd, new decor, 2/2, all appls, W&D, utils paid $790+dep 405-229-8574

Annual Spring Equip. Consignment Auction

Luxury 2 story duplex in exc cond, redecorated, 2 bed, 2 bath, 2 car, 1550 sq ft, fenced yard, easy access to Tinker, $1095 mo, available now, 405-728-2974.

¡‘¡ March 24th, 9:00 am ¡‘¡ 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 1/4 mile. This is only a partial list. Expecting 30+ tractors, 60+ trailers, hay, tillage, vehicles & lots of 3 pt. equip. We will be accepting consignments starting Mon, Mar. 19th - Fri, Mar. 23rd from 10-5. ’08 Case IH Max 115 w/L750 Ldr; ’07 Kubota 2800; JD 2355 w/Ldr; IH 5088; IH 5088 w/Farmhand XL 1140 Ldr; JD 2950; JD 2555 w/Ldr; JD 2150 w/JD 520 Ldr; 2Hesston 5540 Balers; JD 330 Baler; Vermeer 506K Baler; JD 567 Baler; Steffan Bale Accum. & Grapple; Airway 10’ Aerator; GP 24’ Drill; UFT NT Drill; ’06 Dodge 3500; ’99 Dodge 2500; ’08 Ford; ’03 GMC; ’03 Chevy 1 Ton; ’04 Westtex Belly Dump; Diamond T 44’ Tandem Axle Hot Shot. For more info., items & pics visit

422 Wilson 2 bed 1 bath $600. 732-3411

317 E Jacobs 2 bed 1 bath $600. 732-3411

5911 Bonnie Dr, OKC 73162 3/2/2, approx 1500 sq ft, 405-370-1077. Duplex: 1 story.

10848 Admiral Drive, 73162 4/2/2, 370-1077.

RosenfeltAuctions.com or call 405-364-9277

3/2/2 312 W. 10th in Edm. also 3+/2.5/2 close to Edm 749-0603

No Buyers Premium! ¡‘ Rosenfelt Auctions ‘¡

2 br, 1 ba, 1 gar, fncd bk yd patio ch&a 4525 NW 33rd No Sec 8, $800 mo + SD ¡ 405-721-7439 3/2K/2, 9912 Harvest Hills Road, No Sec 8, No Pets, 405-749-7877.

5 Thomas Kinkade Original oil paintings on canvas, framed $75$700 serious only 334-329-9842

2/1/1, exc cond, all appliances, 1837 Carlisle Rd, $785, 721-3757.

Mobile Home, 2bed, 2bath, w/ appls included + W&D, storage shed, Edmond Schools, No Pets 348-6240 or 623-1181 MWC For Rent/Sale. Nice homes $400/up. RV space $200 306-2576

1 or 2 beds. Credit chk & work/ personal refs. 577-2331/818-9129

Restaurant Equipment Auction

Tuesday March 27, 2018. 224 N. Falcon Dr, OKC, OK 73127. Begins promptly at 9:17 AM. Liquidation of 4 Jamba Juice locations. All clean, working equipment. Tables, Chairs, Ice Machines, Walk In Coolers & Freezers, Shelves, Juicers & Display Counters. Coolers & freezers have been professionally disassembled. Access to the company for reassembly is available. Please call Rick Scrivner at 405-919-2271 or see www. advanced auctionsolutions.com for more information.

Financing avail. 30day-5yr warr. $125&up 1233 SE 44th 632-8954 Washer, Dryer, Freezer, Stove, Frig, $100 ea, can del, 820-8727.

Sheet Metal 3'x10' $16 ¡ Trim & Screws ¡ Mon-Sat ¡ 390-2077

'82 L2 Combine, EXC COND. Motor needs head gasket. Retiring $3000 580-628-2332.

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

LOOKATOKC.COM

¡‘ GET YOUR FIREWOOD ‘¡

Starting at $125/rick delivered & stacked, call Ashley 405-503-2478

Paying cash for: Diabetic Test

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

DESPERATELY WANTED:

Good working Smith Corona Word Processor that takes 4x4 floppy disc.. 405-682-5519

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

Safe Step WALK-IN TUB

just purchased new/installed for $14,784. Golden POWER LIFT & RECLINE CHAIR paid $1558, BOTH NEW NEVER USED take highest bid on either item.

405-630-5297

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

Early Spring Sale! Large selection of gas & electric cars! 872-5671.

GENETIC SUPERIOR BULLS

Commercial Eliptical Precore EFX Like new $1200. 405-417-2219

XDs/3.3/45acp, 2 tone, 3 magazines. Very nice rig for conceal carry. Only $425 Firm. Best Deal In Town! 405-618-5800 Conceal/Open Carry Class $45 Total ¡ 405-818-7904 www.HavePistolWillCarry.com

5x8 » 5x10 » 6x10 » 6x12

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

For more profit! Low birth wts like Angus but more muscle & growth & better disposition. Buy Now Most $2,000-$2,800. John Kusel Limousins ¡ 580-759-6038

NO RAIN.....MUST SELL!!!!!

(23) young, heavy bred black & black/white face cows, 6 calves on ground, $1675 each; (1) 3 year old registered Angus bull, $3000; 580-729-0344 (65) fancy open Angus heifers, ready to breed, weigh 900 lbs, OCV vaccination, $1250 each; 580-374-1478.

2 black Sim bulls $1400ea or $2500/both 405-964-3732

March 22 - April 4, 2018

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March 22 - April 4, 2018

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ADBA Reg Classic Am Bully

POP, pics av. $200 580-278-8060

AKITA PUPS

AKC Reg 2M, 2F, 9wks old, black/ white or fawn/white, POP $500 Text 405-471-1773 or 405-694-1837

German Shepherds, White, AKC Top Quality, 1 F left, $600. 405-760-4419 Giant Schnauzer Puppies, Born 10/29/17, AKC, 3M, 3F, $1000. (405) 201-8603 201-8703 Lv msg

PATIO COVERS, CARPORTS, CONCRETE WORK. PHILREIMER.COM 405-740-9097

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

2 Car Carports $1,695 Installed. Other sizes available. 694-6109

ROTTS, 6 weeks, 3M, 2F, s/w/t/d POP, $300, 405-517-5336.

Aussiedoodles & Labradoodles Health tested lines, shots, vet ck, registry, 2 yr hip & health guarantee $675 & up 918-791-8800 Basset Hound AKC 9 weeks old Text for pics. $450. 405-274-4968

Drives, Patios, All Types,

Goldendoodles, 3 adorable males, s/w, $1200, 405-278-1144.

Chihuahua, ACA, 1F, white with black spot, $550, 405-627-0419.

Golden Doodles F-1 S/W DOB 1/25 800 + 316377-9993 alsersland@gmail.com

Chiweenies, 3M, adorable, s/w, 9 weeks old, $250 each, text 405-207-1558.

ROTTWEILER AKC puppies, Dad is National & International Champion, $1250, 405-481-5558

Dachshunds, 2M, 2F, red, $275-$300ea. 580-465-1571 Doberman Pups AKC 1 blk F 1 red M 4.5wks $300ea. 806-231-9843

Patios, Drives & More, Tearouts, Etc., Lic, Ins, Free Est, 794-8505.

Thank you St. Jude for Answered Prayers, Beverly.

French Bulldogs AKC 6wks blk & wht Brindle & blues. 4M 2F $2000 now accepting dep 405-684 0359 German Rottweilers & Yellow Labs Adult Female Rott $500; Adult Male Rott $350; Two 5mo Male yellow Lab Pups $200 & $100 Best Offer 405-821-7771

Bloodlines, 8 wks old, 2M 3F $1500 EA 405-503-1707.

Name Change Rebecka Lynn Dement born on 67-86 in OK County, OK is now Rebecka Lynn Turpin. 9366724123

LAB PUPS AKC

Big, thick, blocky pups! Snow white, 6M, 1F, $900, Sire & Dam are excellent water fowl or upland bird hunters, shots & wormed, eyes, hips & health grtd. Also 5 year yellow M&F, and 2 white M 8 months, $200-$600. Lots of references. Check us out mclemorelabradorretrievers.com or on FB. 405-933-1500.

LOOKATOKC.COM

QUALITY FENCE COMPANY FREE ESTIMATES

31 years raising quality Labs!

Labs, AKC reg., 3 yellow, 3 black, 2 choc., parents on premises, $500. 405-284-6805

MORGAN FENCE Co since 1940's Any type fencing/repair 921-0494 Shidoodle Tiny Qlty Ready Now 1 blonde/wht boy, 2red/wht. New 5 boys/1girl $450-$500 9184260169

370-3572, quality work, repair/ replace, fully ins, OK reg #3118.

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

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

»GENE’S TREE SERVICE» Insured-Free Est. 682-2100. Home Repair & Remodel. Roofing. Siding. Free Estimate. 410-2495.

SIB. HUSKIES AKC pups

variety of colors! S/W $400-$800 Text only 405-802-4415 debbiesdreamhuskies.com

L&R Tree Service, Low Prices,

Ins, Free Est, Firewood, 946-3369.

SIBERIAN HUSKIES

AKC, 7 wks, 1 gray & wht M, 1 red & wht M, blue eyes, s/w, POP, $450, 405-534-3377.

RESIDENTIAL HAULING AND CLEANING, 765-8843.

German Shepherd Pups AKC reg, healthy, 6 wks, 1st shots, 6M 1F, blk & tan, $400ea. 405-921-8761

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS, AKC, 7wks vet checked, 1st shots, POP, blk & tan $600 405-313-1879

Garay's Roofing/Construction

on new & repair, 405-317-0474.

Labs AKC dob 1/19/18 s/w chocs & blks, M & F $350. 580-254-0910

German Shepherd Puppies AKC GS Pups, Taking deposits. Whelp 1/31 Will release 3/28. Discount for Veterans. Dewormed and first shots. Strong Genetics. Copy of Litter Certificate Black & Tan. MUST HAVE YARD!! 5 Females $750, 2 Male Call 580-243 8702, 719-289 6585

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

Rottweilers AKC Champion

English Bulldog AKC,6wks old,vet checked,first shots and wormed. $1500 5 year old female $1000. I do take debt/ credit cards. Traci 404-830-7367

English Bulldogs, AKC,

Bill's Painting & Home Repairs

Great Dane Puppies,

LAB, AKC black F, 9 weeks, champ bldln, health grntd, $500, 405-760-6638 ‘ soonerlabs.com

3M 10 wks, s/w, color carriers $2500 ’ 405-758-3761

Fitzpatrick Painting, 34 yrs exp, free est, lic, ins, 405-446-9882. Quality Work! Free Est. 306-3087.

Great Dane full blood

COCKER pups 3 AKC Beauties!

English Bulldog Puppies Only 4 left. 3 months old. Champion bloodlines. 3 males 1 female. Pics available. $1300. 405-612-5677

Patios, Drives & More, Tearouts, Etc., Lic, Ins, Free Est, 794-8505.

Only 2 F left, black. $300ea 405-368-7294 or 405-368-9677. 7 weeks, must have fenced yard, free to good home, 405-366-0722.

shots groomd $500 405-408-8724

Jim's Painting/Remodeling, int/ ext, res/com'l, insured, 366-0722.

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

Cavalier 3 m $1000 Joshua.mailink@gmail. com 918-855-0462

Chihuahua Teacup Puppies, wht, cream, choc, 1st s/w, home raised $400-$1000. 918-287-1939

JACKSON'S PROFESSIONAL PAINTING AND GENERAL CONSTRUCTION LLC We provide Professional Commercial and Residential Painting Services at an Affordable Price! Free Consultations. Call: (580)665-0250

Firefighters Lawn Care

Maltese (ideal house pets) M & F, small, no shed, low allergy & odor, easy going, sweet & loving dogs, delivery/show room, $600-$1000, 918-694-3868.

Morkies, beautiful colors, M&F, s/w, $400 each, 405-314-2738.

PAPILLONS AKC

10 wks old 2m up to date on shots. Bam Bam $1000. Fred $800. 316-833-8203 Pembroke Welsh Corgis, AKC puppies, black tri-color, $900, 580-765-8916.

Appliance & A/C Service, 27 years exper, $40 service call, 371-3049. Westie 9 month old male westie. HB, fixed. $1200. 405 473 7598 YORKIE POO & MORKIE, ADORABLE ’ ’ ’ ITTY BITTY $495-$595 Visa/MC 405-826-4557 Yorkies, beautiful puppies, ready 3/20, M $500, F $600, call or text, 580-399-7125.

Scalping/Mow. Free Est 408-4478

Lawn care, bkyrd cleanup, fences, drainage. Free Est. 405-816-0077

Brick & stone work. Small concrete jobs. (405) 821-1076

Rototilling, all yard work, scalping & more, 789-3062/682-6383. Steam Clean $15/room. Floods, stretch, inst. upholst. 882-4592

Clean Up, Yard Work. NW OKC, Edmond. Insured. 919-6494

March 22 - April 4, 2018

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March 22 - April 4, 2018

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