12-06-2011, 11:00 PM
Or Choctaw Bingo. Probably the best song about some parts of current-day Oklahoma.
"We have an unwritten rule around here not to do anything stupid."
-Casey Jacobsen, Feb 3, 2000
(12-05-2011, 02:53 PM)GulfCoastPoke link Wrote:Just wait till the game...he packs a double barrel shotgun and fires it to get our crowds attention.
(12-05-2011, 02:53 PM)GulfCoastPoke link Wrote:Just wait till the game...he packs a double barrel shotgun and fires it to get our crowds attention.
Quote:I remember crossing the country as a kid and seeing those old license plates "Oklahoma is OK."Â To this day those things remind me how dumb government is.
Quote:I remember crossing the country as a kid and seeing those old license plates "Oklahoma is OK."Â To this day those things remind me how dumb government is.
(12-07-2011, 09:11 AM)PokesPeak link Wrote:made my first visit to northern california a couple weeks ago (santa rosa). loved it! went to napa and all that kinda stuff, also went to bodega bay, i guess that is where the hitchcock movie 'the birds' was filmed?Terrific! That's one of our favorite areas too. Glad you loved it. Yes - it was where Hitchcock's movie "The Birds" was filmed. Hope you got to Tomales Bay. btw - Joe Montana used to live on a ranch in that area.
(12-07-2011, 09:11 AM)PokesPeak link Wrote:made my first visit to northern california a couple weeks ago (santa rosa). loved it! went to napa and all that kinda stuff, also went to bodega bay, i guess that is where the hitchcock movie 'the birds' was filmed?Terrific! That's one of our favorite areas too. Glad you loved it. Yes - it was where Hitchcock's movie "The Birds" was filmed. Hope you got to Tomales Bay. btw - Joe Montana used to live on a ranch in that area.
(12-07-2011, 10:26 AM)Griffin78 link Wrote:Hope you got to Tomales Bay. btw - Joe Montana used to live on a ranch in that area.
(12-07-2011, 10:26 AM)Griffin78 link Wrote:Hope you got to Tomales Bay. btw - Joe Montana used to live on a ranch in that area.
(12-07-2011, 12:25 PM)CowboyIndian link Wrote:[quote author=Griffin78 link=topic=5116.msg37031#msg37031 date=1323278775]As did the only-slightly-less-revered CowboyIndian.[/quote] :)
Hope you got to Tomales Bay. btw - Joe Montana used to live on a ranch in that area.
(12-07-2011, 12:25 PM)CowboyIndian link Wrote:[quote author=Griffin78 link=topic=5116.msg37031#msg37031 date=1323278775]As did the only-slightly-less-revered CowboyIndian.[/quote] :)
Hope you got to Tomales Bay. btw - Joe Montana used to live on a ranch in that area.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:The very first image I get when I hear Oklahoma (where I have never set foot) is a flat, wide land -- I guess I think that it's where the "amber waves of grain" come from.
There's a serious, taciturn guy with a cowboy hat in the image.
If you ever saw the 1979 movie Hair, the film's beginning shows a guy saying goodbye to his dad, out in the heartland, at a greyhound stop in the middle of nowhere on a misty morning. That sequence and that character seem like oklahoma to me.
In fact, my dad was born in Stillwater, OK, but left when he was an infant.
I don't think Oklahoma feels like it is always at the center of actual events that epitomize red-state usa. For instance, Oklahomans never seemed like Arizona's Sheriff Joe, or Texas's "secede from the union" chatter. But I do sense that some of those stories about this or that school district or school administrator limiting this or that use of the concept of "Evolution" in schools, I think some of that is in OK.
I think I heard that there might be wind come rushing down the plain, but that is probably a stereotype.
I'll tell you one thing, if I could take a good long road trip in Oklahoma, I'd do it right now and chill out in a diner in a small town. Long overdue for a good American road trip.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:The very first image I get when I hear Oklahoma (where I have never set foot) is a flat, wide land -- I guess I think that it's where the "amber waves of grain" come from.
There's a serious, taciturn guy with a cowboy hat in the image.
If you ever saw the 1979 movie Hair, the film's beginning shows a guy saying goodbye to his dad, out in the heartland, at a greyhound stop in the middle of nowhere on a misty morning. That sequence and that character seem like oklahoma to me.
In fact, my dad was born in Stillwater, OK, but left when he was an infant.
I don't think Oklahoma feels like it is always at the center of actual events that epitomize red-state usa. For instance, Oklahomans never seemed like Arizona's Sheriff Joe, or Texas's "secede from the union" chatter. But I do sense that some of those stories about this or that school district or school administrator limiting this or that use of the concept of "Evolution" in schools, I think some of that is in OK.
I think I heard that there might be wind come rushing down the plain, but that is probably a stereotype.
I'll tell you one thing, if I could take a good long road trip in Oklahoma, I'd do it right now and chill out in a diner in a small town. Long overdue for a good American road trip.
(12-06-2011, 12:40 PM)garvin link Wrote:Count me out of the OU-fan bashers.
(12-06-2011, 12:40 PM)garvin link Wrote:Count me out of the OU-fan bashers.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:The very first image I get when I hear Oklahoma (where I have never set foot) is a flat, wide land -- I guess I think that it's where the "amber waves of grain" come from.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:There's a serious, taciturn guy with a cowboy hat in the image.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:I don't think Oklahoma feels like it is always at the center of actual events that epitomize red-state usa. For instance, Oklahomans never seemed like Arizona's Sheriff Joe, or Texas's "secede from the union" chatter. But I do sense that some of those stories about this or that school district or school administrator limiting this or that use of the concept of "Evolution" in schools, I think some of that is in OK.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:I think I heard that there might be wind come rushing down the plain, but that is probably a stereotype.
I'll tell you one thing, if I could take a good long road trip in Oklahoma, I'd do it right now and chill out in a diner in a small town. Long overdue for a good American road trip.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:The very first image I get when I hear Oklahoma (where I have never set foot) is a flat, wide land -- I guess I think that it's where the "amber waves of grain" come from.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:There's a serious, taciturn guy with a cowboy hat in the image.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:I don't think Oklahoma feels like it is always at the center of actual events that epitomize red-state usa. For instance, Oklahomans never seemed like Arizona's Sheriff Joe, or Texas's "secede from the union" chatter. But I do sense that some of those stories about this or that school district or school administrator limiting this or that use of the concept of "Evolution" in schools, I think some of that is in OK.
(12-06-2011, 07:33 PM)estephan link Wrote:I think I heard that there might be wind come rushing down the plain, but that is probably a stereotype.
I'll tell you one thing, if I could take a good long road trip in Oklahoma, I'd do it right now and chill out in a diner in a small town. Long overdue for a good American road trip.
Quote:It is flat, I'll give you that. But the eastern half the of the state is Green Country (well, the northeast quarter of the state is anyway), and it can get pretty hilly. But hilly is really what it is; mountains don't really crop up unless you count the near 1000 foot hills in south central Oklahoma.
Quote:It is flat, I'll give you that. But the eastern half the of the state is Green Country (well, the northeast quarter of the state is anyway), and it can get pretty hilly. But hilly is really what it is; mountains don't really crop up unless you count the near 1000 foot hills in south central Oklahoma.
(12-13-2011, 11:29 AM)CowboyIndian link Wrote:Clever? Really? Your bar is low.
(12-13-2011, 12:01 PM)oman link Wrote:Long hair/beards = kinda funny.
(12-13-2011, 12:01 PM)oman link Wrote:Long hair/beards = kinda funny.