It’s never exciting until you need it January 23rd, 2010

Brandon

Anytime you hear of companies moving into an area, bringing X number of jobs, I always tend to think “well, thats nice, for someone”.

Until that someone was me.

After getting unceremoniously bounced from an industry I truly enjoyed, it took me a while to find something that I really wanted to do and do well. I spent most of my pre-media life working in customer service, and I learned a long time ago that I am at my best when I am helping people, meaning a return to customer service was inevitable.

When it was announced AAA was building a Customer Service Center in Oklahoma City and that it would generate upwards of 1200 jobs, I was sure that it was going to be a good thing, but until I got a job with them did I realize how important national companies extending their roots our area are for the big picture. National companies, create jobs, employing talented people, and stimulating the economy better than any government program can.

I went almost 7 years without an honest to goodness 8-5 job, but I am glad that the 20 some applications I filled out, the 5 or more employees that told me I was overqualified, and the mountains of headache I went thru were worth it when I found a company that wanted me as an asset, not just filling a hole.

Businesses make our city standout, including the great companies listed on www.360OKC.com !

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Giving in a Time of Need January 17th, 2010

Brandon

The island nation of Haiti has been devastated by major earthquake that has rocked the poorest nation in the western hemisphere. Thousands have died, and upwards of a million people have had their lives forever changed.

As always, Americans have risen to help a fallen people with donations of money, clothing, volunteering time. Celebrities will gather their influence to ensure we do the right thing, and while this is an incredible show of generosity, every time a tragedy strikes a foreign land we are among the fore-front in response.

At risk of sounding like Buchannan or Limbaugh, what about the millions of people in America that need our help?

Granted, nothing can affect our basic human reaction to help someone in need especially in such a tragic situation such as a natural disaster, but why do we overlook the people we see everyday to help someone in another country we have never met? Thousands of homeless, hungry, and poor people in Oklahoma could benefit from any of our assistance, especially children born into those situations. I understand that many of the homeless are self-inflicted situations, drugs, alcohol, gambling, etc.,.. and that the panhandling teams in the metro area really put a bad face on the situation for those who genuinely need help.

I am not here to admonish anyone who feels compelled to donate anything at anytime. Volunteering and donating are good for the soul, all that I ask, is that you give overseas, please consider doing locally as well. I sent $10 to Haiti via a text message, and recently dropped off clothes at the City Rescue Mission, while neither were much, I really wish I could do more.

If you feel compelled to donate, either locally or abroad here are a few avenues…

American Red Cross
Habitat For Humanity
City Rescue Mission – Oklahoma City

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New Years Resolutions? January 6th, 2010

Brandon

I dont know about you, but New Years Resolutions are soooooo 1995… Seriously. When was the last time you EVER heard of anyone a) Making a non-obvious one b) Keeping one past Valentines Day c) Anyone who made one telling you every detail about it… I’ve come up with a few ways to bypass Resolution-itis…

Lose Weight. This one always puzzled me a bit. Sure a majority of us could stand to lose a few pounds, but why wait until New Years to start? Is Grandma’s Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner THAT good that you can’t make it thru without stuffing your face and keeping the diet going? Save your sanity and start in June… and you can pack on a few like the people who go on Biggest Loser do, so when you lose 10 pounds you actually feel better even though you weigh the same as you do now…

Get Organized. Lets face it. Unless you are OCD, or you cleaned your room for fun as a kid, this simply isn’t going to happen. I honestly believe that it is against human nature to change anything about your personality after the age of 15. Best way to remedy this resolution, find something else…

Save Money. This one is incredibly feasible, but it takes dedication. Suze Orman is a money nazi, but damnit, she gets results! The best way to save money, don’t have kids… for the 98% of the world who jumped (or fell) off that plank, you have no chance. You might as well sell a kidney or something because it is entirely uphill from here. My wife and I are now one of only 3 married couples in the 28-34 range who don’t have kids, and it is everything you thought it would be. To be honest, I don’t know how you people do it. I am too selfish to put someone else before my needs and wants. So in 10-15 years, you will be much happier, just be sure to get fixed so there aren’t any surprises that could derail financial freedom.

Be healthier. I’ve got nothing here,… I am lazy as all hell when I am not working, and mix in a salad every once in a while, but still… I have no advice here..   so yeah… crazy weather we are having huh?

So in closing; Procrastinate, Ignore, Don’t procreate, and don’t lazieate… and yes, I know I just made that word up…

2011 will be here before you know it!

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2009, Better than ‘08, but still pretty ho-hum December 27th, 2009

Brandon

2009.
I think a lot of people will look back on this past year, and have plenty of memories, but not ones we willingly hold on to.

Start with a Mortgage Crisis and a global economic collapse, and there wasn’t a ton of optimism for the final year of the decade. But there was plenty of sunshine coming off the election of Barack Obama as our nations 44th president, but with a lot of things that came into fruition this year, time will tell.

We became friends with words like Swine Flu, Octomom, and Pirates, but 2009 might be remembered for things we lost more than what we gained.

Locally Wayman Tisdale, Oral Roberts, and Walter Cronkrite touched the hearts of many Oklahomans. Entertainment lost faces of the 1980’s in Michael Jackson, Farrah Fawcett, Patrick Swayze, and John Hughes. The world lost greats like Edward Kennedy, Les Paul, Arturo Gatti, Harry Kalas, Paul Harvey, and various celebrities like Billy Mays, Ed McMahon, David Carradine, Chuck Daly, and Danny Gans.

The 2009 Sports landscape… yeeesh… From Bradford’s shoulder and Gresham’s knee to Free Dez and the Thunder’s rough first season, it was a tough year. But a lot of positive sparks were produced, including an OSU Cotton Bowl, the emergence of Oklahoma’s defense, Russell Westbrook, Thabo Sefalosha, James Harden, and Serge Ibaka becoming household names.

I don’t know what I will remember most from ‘09. But there are plenty to chose from, Carrie Prejean Controversy, Jerome Ersland and the Drug Store Shooting, Jessica Alba’s love of Sharks, U2 playing Norman, Obama’s Inaguration, MJ’s Death,…

2009 is over, and it was much better than 2008. 2010 could me something amazing… so lets see, and hope for the future!

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Death of an Institution December 17th, 2009

Brandon

News came out this week about the impending closing of an OKC landmark, State Fair Speedway.

I am a fan of racing, especially the local variety. I am the only person in my family to not race a car in some fashion in my lifetime, but from the dragstrip to the dirt tracks, racing is in my blood. I spent MANY a night trackside, sweating my butt off, and loving every minute of it. But now with word that State Fair Speedway will be closing, somehow, I seem to be OK with it.

The facility had everything you could want, a great location, accommodating facility, loyal attendance, GREAT driving… but no vision.

SO MANY NIGHTS, I would walk past the same turnstiles, past the same rickety snack bar, and climb the stands that would vibrate with every passing car, and think of what could be. The 1/4 mile track could feature the World of Outlaws or the late model class, the inner 1/8 mile circuit could run midgets and everything else. It was THE place to be on Friday nights (for me at least), but the continued neglect to upgrade facilities proved fatal.

Did MAPS 3 kill this institution of my youth? Perhaps. If the newly approved Convention Center were to rise from its ashes, we will know… if it becomes a parking lot like All-Sports Stadium, maybe not. Did State Fair Park management neglect this relic? Absolutely. With the MILLIONS of dollars spent in upgrades to the Park, it appeared that the writing was on the wall for some time.

The economic impact of the closing of State Fair Speedway is unknown, but there are now a lot of people who raced there that don’t have a close place to play. I-44 Speedway (I-44 and SW 149th) appears best suited to gain from SFS’s closing, but it’s 1/8 mile track isn’t big enough to hold the top classes. Perhaps 44’s new ownership could expand to add a 1/4 mile track, or Noble’s Thunder Valley could build one, but it cant be done in 3 months, as the new season was set to start in March.

But I keep going back to the fact that the writing was on the wall for a while. The product had grown stale, the facility hadn’t been maintained, and there wasn’t a huge push by ownership to promote the track, or make it available for concerts (as it was during the 80s-90s). SOMEONE should have seen what was going on, and offered to pick up the slack. MAYBE that did happen behind closed doors, MAYBE the city has tried to steer this thing into the grave for some time.

Either way, a staple of OKC has been cast aside, and I don’t know if I like where this is headed. Is OKC now exchanging stock cars for regattas? Or are we just ridding ourself of a cash blackhole and an eyesore?

I would love to hear your thoughts on this at our message boards.

If you are heading out of town for Christmas, flying to Bowl Games, or even a vacation to somewhere warm, check out www.360okc.com’s coupon from Fast Track Airport Parking for 20% off parking!

Be sure the hit up for the latest on events, jobs, reviews, and COUPONS!!!

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Always Waiting for the next BIG THING December 11th, 2009

Brandon

So now that the world is enamored with Blu-Ray, Wii, iPhone, Zhu Zhu Hamsters…

Have we all gone mad?

I realize that there is always a desire to advance and evolve, but its getting a bit crazy. Can we all agree to just stop with Blu-Ray? I really dont want to restart my collection, again… But then again, just 15 years ago, the internet required a phone line and a squawky connection that could wake the dead. Now we can get on the internet on our phones and launch missiles at KRYZHFSEASDASTAN…

So why hasn’t the rest of civilization caught up with the advances made in technology? If the car industry had advanced at the same rate as the computer industry, cars would hover, cost $1000, get 250 miles to the ounce, and drive themselves.

Maybe humans are just stubborn, or hypocritical… we expect advances in medicine, technology, and science, yet we continue to fear change. Stupid people breed faster than the rest, thus dumbing down society, and we seem to be OK with it. We tell people they are free to live their lives the way they want, then slap them down with draconian rules and ideals.

Here’s hoping we create advances in humanity in 2010.

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Next MAPS vote? December 4th, 2009

Brandon

Although this upcoming MAPS vote really doesn’t do a lot for me personally, it helps the community. Just like every vote before Tuesday, I don’t believe I have been affected by much of anything on the ballot, but its for the better of us, therefore I am for it.

So in 24-30 months when the next MAPS vote pops up, here are a few things I would like to see…

A true farmers market.
Or at least a place for people to hawk their crap instead of the mall. Seriously, when did the mall become a flea market? I realize the economy is iffy right now, but are malls that hard up for cash they will let anyone set up a tent and hawk their stuff? Maybe I just want a resurgence of the Flea Market, but you get my point.

Expanded bus service.
It never fails if I decide traffic is too jacked up on the interstate, I elect to take backroads home, only to get stopped by empty city busses making stops on major streets, slowing down traffic. If more people rode the bus, I really wouldnt have an issue with getting stopped behind one on the street. Truth be told, if city bus service was expanded with more routes and stops, I would ride the bus. Especially to events in downtown.

Mutli-use stadium near downtown OR renovations to Taft Stadium
I broadcast a couple high school football games from the once grand Taft Stadium, and it made me hurt on the inside that we allowed such a great relic to fall by the wayside. Taft was once the epicenter of sport in OKC, from car racing to football, if it was big, it was at Taft. While a 10-15,000 seat multi-use stadium south of the Oklahoma River might be more financially sensible, part of me wants to hold onto SOME tradition.

A medium sized theater
Ever since the fall of the Tower Theater, OKC has really lacked a GREAT concert venue. The Diamond Ballroom gets you up-close and personal with your favorite artists, but the site is less than desirable. The Coca-Cola Events center is a good multi-use facility, but it lacks a soul. A carbon copy of Tulsa’s Brady Theater is something I REALLY want, and if I ever win the lottery, will be on my list!

Let us know what you think at the message boards.

360OKC.com gives us a coupon this week that I am VERY excited for! http://www.360okc.com/Restaurants/Pizza/OldChicago.html  $5 off $20 at Old Chicago!

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Black Friday, ummmm… Why? November 28th, 2009

Brandon

Every year we get the mailers, flooded with commercials, and get our hopes up for Black Friday. The biggest shopping day of the year, and how “great” the specials are…

While there are a handful of things that MIGHT be worth standing outside at 3am to buy at discount, I am the type of person that would rather buy it the week before or the week after at full price and not have to put up with the udder bonkersness (yes I just made up a word) of the lines, people, and situation.

WE ARE LIVING IN THE GOLDEN AGE OF THE INTERNET. Just this Black Friday, I bought a bed… online… no lines, no issues, free delivery, and didn’t even have to take off my tazmainian devil slippers…

Meanwhile, people braved the elements, to pick up a knock-off name 720p flat panel TV, or a $299 laptop that will be obsolete by the Apocolypse (2012).

PRE SHOP, avoid the hassle, and buy it in November or Christmas Eve… it hasn’t done me wrong yet!

Heard RAVE reviews about The Blind Side, and while I don’t like Sandra Bullock, it is amazing… second movie I had seen in a week that made me cry like a little girl…

BIG 5-game homestand for the Thunder to start off December, including Houston and Boston, 3-2 thru this would be INCREDIBLE! How fun is this team to watch when all cylinders are clicking?! A great pre-game spot to hit will be the Bricktown Brewery for 1/2 price beers and appetizers http://www.360okc.com/coupons has your printable coupon to stop in and save!

To find out whats going on All-Around Town, check out http://www.360okc.com/ to get up to date event listings and coupons to local businesses!!!

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Waiting for chicken and the plot to thicken November 10th, 2009

Brandon

I’ve always heard about how grand Chik-fil-a store openings are. Up until about 2 years ago I didn’t know they had stand-alone stores, but the mallrat staple has now grown up and become a giant.

A new store opening in Yukon, and as with EVERY Chik-fil-a store opening, the first 100 people at the store receive free food for a year.

FREE
CHICKEN
FOR
A
YEAR!!!

How did I never know about this until a few months ago. It is totally worth risking hypothermia for free food! SO… Feeling compelled and challenged by the bait of free grub I loaded up in the new Ford Escape (which I need a name for, I want Skellator, but my wife won’t let me) and headed to Yukon.

I get there and there is already close to 150 people waiting for the grand opening. I stood in line for a few hours hoping the weak would fall from the ranks, but free chicken was apparently too compelling to get people to leave.

Chik-fil-a is damn good, so I get it… there is a new store opening on I-240 in a few weeks, I am ALL OVER that!

Later in the weekend, I took my wife to see a movie, and because of a Wedding/DJ gig, we had to go earlier in the day. We settled on “Where the Wild Things Are”. I was intrigued having read the books as a tyke, but I really didn’t remember much of the storyline which didn’t affect my view on the movie.

It is NOT a kids movie, maybe a tweens and up, but I think the average 5-7 year old might be scared by the “Blair Witch” camera work, and be lost by the story.

It is DEEP, it hits hard at how divorce affects kids, and it is interesting how I connected with the story. With that aside, there really isn’t much to it. I kept waiting for something to happen, and it really never did. Decent movie, but I doubt it will be added to the DVD collection.

Coming Next Week: What can you do in OKC on $40…

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Brandon Rush: Halloween Jumps the Shark but Movies Still Scare October 31st, 2009

admin

Ahhh, Halloween… Years ago it was undoubtedly my favorite holiday of the year. More than Christmas, St. Patricks Day, and a close winner over the 4th of July.

Then I grew up, and somehow Halloween lost its luster. Maybe it was the realization that eating 42 bite sized Butterfingers in one night would give me both acne and a stomach ache. Maybe it was outgrowing trick or treating. But after much consternation, I now know why Halloween has dipped so much in my holiday pecking order.

The steady decline started when I was 19. A handful of friends and I went to the Bricktown Haunted Warehouse, a staple of my Halloween, and on this fateful night, I learned many things. Pinhead was the greatest horror movievillain in person, chainsaws with cardboard blades feel like reel ones when being chased thru poorly lit hallways, and I really, REALLY hate clowns.

My friends put me at the end of our group, little did I know, that person gets the worst of it. Early in the tour, an evil clown stationed in a strobe-lit room jumps out, everyone screams and laughs and moves on. I become stricken with fear, and proceed to look around every corner for clowns. I walk past the electrocution chamber, evil doctors surgery table and the possessed kids room, and I barely bat an eye because of some guy making $6.50 an hour in makeup and a wig scared the bejesus out of me, and I KNOW he’s coming back. The next 10 minutes is a blur, but evidently I stopped to tie my shoe, got left by my group, the clown came back, I punched him, and was politely asked by management to not return. Bad way to end the night.

THEN I find out that two of the greatest urban legends of Haunted Houses around here don’t even exist. Anyone remember hearing about the “13 stories of hell” haunted house that was supposedly so scary that if you made it all the way thru the top floor you got your money back. Yeah, doesn’t exist… or about the Haunted Orphanage in Guthrie that 74 kids died in a fire in… a fake as well.

It was so much more fun when the fear was imagined and fun. Then you grow up and realize that there are some sick people in this world that inflict real fear and torture, and suddenly it’s doesn’t seem the same.

Haunted Houses lost their luster on me, but movies for some reason still do the trick, if they are done right. The horror genre has had its moments over the last few decades. The good (Rob Zombie’s “Halloween”, The Ring), The Bad (All of the Final Destinations), and the Ugly (The Lizzy McGuire Movie), but few have done as well for me lately than The Haunting in Connecticut, House of 1000 Corpses, and Paranormal Activity.

The documentary setting of Paranormal Activity adds an interesting twist to the movie. So much of television now is reality based, that this almost seems real, add in the element of the paranormal (which I fully believe in) and it is a mixture of enough relatable elements to scare most anyone. I am usually not one for watching horror movies in theaters (too many distractions), but for the sheer panic some people get from this movie, it’s totally worth it.

Do yourself a favor, go see it in the theater, then go again a few weeks later and just watch the people around you! You might ruin the movie for someone else with your laughter, but the fun of watching someone fling popcorn orMike and Ikes into the air when they are scared is one of the simple joys in life.

Coming next week; Movie Reviews from Michael Jackson: This Is It, my first Thunder blog, and a restaurant review from wherever the UrbanSpoon application on iPhone sends me.

To find out about upcoming events like Chevelle at the Diamond Ballroom, Celtic Woman at the Ford Center, or Coupons to area businesses be sure to hit www.360OKC.com!imgD

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