Why So Few Americans Live In Oklahoma As Compared To Texas

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  • Опубликовано: 11 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @67amiga
    @67amiga Год назад +1281

    As a Oklahoman, I enjoyed you video about our state. A small correction concerning your reference to the "Oklahoma River". The actual river is the North Canadian river. The Oklahoma River is just a 7 mile section of the North Canadian that runs through the center of Oklahoman City and has only existed since 2004. You also gave me a chuckle concerning your pronunciation of Osage and Ouachita. Osage is Oh sage like the plant. Ouachita is pronounced Waa shee taw. (You also mispelled Ouachita.) It's okay, it takes a lot of Oklahomas a life time to properly pronounce a lot of the Native American influenced words you find throughout the state.

    • @dogbarbill
      @dogbarbill Год назад +96

      He mis-pronounced Caddo too. Sure am glad he didn't try Washita.

    • @laurasomebody
      @laurasomebody Год назад +57

      Can you please explain to me why they pronounce Miami, OK like my-am-uh? Texas import here, and it makes no sense to me.

    • @InformalGreeting
      @InformalGreeting Год назад +89

      @@laurasomebody like everything else he mentioned- it comes from the tribes. The Miami tribe pronounced it the way the Oklahoma town is pronounced rather than the way it is said in Florida and Ohio.

    • @MikeJohnson-ut7lx
      @MikeJohnson-ut7lx Год назад +48

      Phillips Petroleum’s HQ’s is in Bartlesville, OK.

    • @kd5inm
      @kd5inm Год назад +41

      Halliburton is HQ in Duncan, OK. My son works for them.

  • @billwhitman1326
    @billwhitman1326 Год назад +761

    Oklahoma lost a lot of its population during the Dust Bowl. I'm surprised you didn't mention that.

    • @lyanreehan
      @lyanreehan Год назад +38

      THANK YOU! OKC WOULDVE EASILY BEEN AS POPULOUS AS DALLAS HADNT IT BEEN FOR THE DUST BOWL

    • @dougo753
      @dougo753 Год назад +82

      The funny thing is since moving to Oklahoma myself a few years ago I have met tons of people that have moved here from California. We joke that there is a "reverse Grapes of Wrath" going on.

    • @spicytuna62
      @spicytuna62 Год назад +14

      Between the 1930 and 1960 censuses, the population of Oklahoma declined 2.8%. The population peaked in 1931 at 2.4 million, and it would not crest that peak until 1962.

    • @lyanreehan
      @lyanreehan Год назад +4

      @@spicytuna62 because of the dust bowl

    • @lyanreehan
      @lyanreehan Год назад +2

      @@spicytuna62 i said okc not okla

  • @cafe1925
    @cafe1925 Год назад +337

    I really was surprised when I get to know Oklahoma has 4M population. It’s as populous as Oregon or Louisiana. To be fair, it’s still a fair amount of population for interior of the US , compared to the west coast Oregon or gulf coast Louisiana.

    • @kammore6209
      @kammore6209 Год назад +23

      Yeah that's kind of a lot of people. I would've assumed it had half that amount

    • @krisconrad1051
      @krisconrad1051 Год назад +22

      Oregon really doesn't have that many people especially for its size. And of those close to 75% of the entire states population is in the Portland metro

    • @iboKirby
      @iboKirby Год назад +14

      Honestly. I’m always surprised to hear there are 4 million people in Oklahoma. It always felt to me like a much smaller state. Like, what are those Oklahomans up to?

    • @Boone_Dogglers
      @Boone_Dogglers Год назад

      @@krisconrad1051 Portland is a disgrace to Oregon.

    • @504deadshot_reaper
      @504deadshot_reaper Год назад +12

      Louisiana has about half of the dry land as Oklahoma.

  • @FriedPi-mc5yt
    @FriedPi-mc5yt Год назад +189

    My great great grandfather came to Oklahoma on the Chickasaw Trail of Tears. I grew up in the D/FW area. Went to Oklahoma after I got out of the service. Got connected to my Chickasaw culture and raised a family with my wife. The slow pace of life agrees with me. I love it here. I love being involved with my tribe. It’s a great place to live if you have simple tastes and like a slow pace to your life.

    • @hummingbird275
      @hummingbird275 Год назад +8

      Great comment❗️👍🏼

    • @brendatomlinson
      @brendatomlinson Год назад +18

      “Simple tastes and a slow pace of life”. This is what I often hear when I ask young people what they like about OKC since moving here. Also they say there are a lot of activities for twenty-somethings.
      I couldn’t wait to get out of this “backwards” city (as I saw it) when I turned 18. I couldn’t stand the slow pace! I’m back now, and though I still find the drivers are much too slow for this Houstonian, the slower pace now suits me.

    • @jasonrobles161
      @jasonrobles161 7 месяцев назад +3

      That's why I moved back. 👍

    • @PapaJohnsPie
      @PapaJohnsPie 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@brendatomlinson Texas drivers are hated in Oklahoma, they can also be unaware or drive 120 In a 65-80. Texas highways are a different breed.

    • @jessethompson6075
      @jessethompson6075 6 месяцев назад

      @@FriedPi-mc5yt your grmpa lied..... the chickasaws came willingly, the choctaws stayed and fought a war against the us army and was pushed hefe on trail of tears after losing war.

  • @ClintShepherd-ve2pf
    @ClintShepherd-ve2pf Год назад +40

    Hey, no mention of the McLellan-Kerr navigational system? Tulsa metro is home to the furthest inland port, and thus hosts a plethora of manufacturing companies, especially relating to oil field equipment or chemical plant equipment. It's a huge piece of geography that shapes the state.
    Also, the Tulsa airport was once busier than the NYC, London, and Paris airports COMBINED!!! The oil boom lead to staggering wealth accumulation (and some unsavory stories like the new movie based on the book, killers of the flower moon, depict). Both of those really deserve a mention. Whoa Nellie is still used today, and came from the first commercially productive oil well in 1897.

  • @defenestrationfan
    @defenestrationfan Год назад +137

    In the 60s my brother worked in NYC and was asked about his state of origin - Oklahoma. He told his friend that the state had just got electricity the year before (as a joke) - and the guy believed him! Next year we were going to get indoor plumbing.

    • @100percentSNAFU
      @100percentSNAFU Год назад +13

      People in NYC only know NYC. I am from Buffalo, the other end of the state, and spent several months there training for a job back in 2006. The people there literally thought Buffalo was in the Arctic and thought it snowed here year round. Nope, it's literally like a couple of degrees of latitude more northerly, and gets basically the same weather as NYC, but more snow in the winter because of the great lakes.

    • @reginagilreathballard3791
      @reginagilreathballard3791 Год назад +3

      😂😂 that's funny, although we do lag behind especially in the rural areas. We did not have street signs/911 until about 10 years ago. Also, things like trash pick was not available until recently.

    • @staceystitches
      @staceystitches Год назад +15

      But Oklahoma has the distinction of having the very first TV station in the US. Also the first station to have TV in color. Oklahoma has always been and remains to be innovative in the field of telecommunications. Meteorology as well. A lot of meteorology equipment was invented right here in Oklahoma. A good chunk of it invented by Gary England, the greatest meteorological journalist of all time. And his protege David Payne is pretty great too.

    • @reginagilreathballard3791
      @reginagilreathballard3791 Год назад +9

      @@staceystitches Yes, you are right about that. We owe a lot to these men (and women) who have perfected this technology..keeping us safe during deadly storms. I love Oklahoma and our governor.

    • @MadMonk67
      @MadMonk67 Год назад +2

      @Rabbelrauser ​ That's 1/2 a century ago. Face it, you're old. 😀

  • @captianpj
    @captianpj Год назад +167

    All of the major oil companies were headquartered in Tulsa and nearby cities until the oil embargo in the 70s. In fact, Phillips Petroleum is the reason Bartlesville has an impressive skyline for its size.

    • @mwbeck
      @mwbeck Год назад +3

      Throw it up shady bville

    • @gingw7333
      @gingw7333 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@captianpj Conoco's world headquarters was located in Ponca City when I moved here as a kid. Yes, I'm that old. It was originally Marland Oil. We have E.W. Marland's "Palace on the Prairie" located here. It's a beautiful mansion he built but only got to enjoy very briefly before losing it all. It's now owned by the city and can be toured as well as his home on our main street (Grand Ave.) which is also beautiful and can be toured.

    • @trishrobinson1523
      @trishrobinson1523 4 месяца назад +5

      Also Oklahoma has a seaport. Look up port of Catoosa!

    • @jstringfellow1961
      @jstringfellow1961 3 месяца назад +1

      When he went on about the oil companies being headquartered in Houston, I had to bite my tongue a little. Sam Walton was born here too, you know.

    • @johnsachs40
      @johnsachs40 2 месяца назад

      @@mwbeckI actually have the shady b shirt lol

  • @kadenreed8603
    @kadenreed8603 Год назад +78

    As someone who grew up in Oklahoma then moved to Texas for high school and college, I can confirm that many people move to Texas for job opportunities. Also, if you’re an immigrant, it is easier to find a community and ethnic food and products in big Texas cities compared to Oklahoma. But as someone who also moved back to Oklahoma, I can say that I do like the slower pace of life and lack of traffic quite a lot.

  • @bonniered0227
    @bonniered0227 3 месяца назад +9

    I lived in Oklahoma my whole life. I am very happy with it being on the less populated side. There is a 70-acre field in front of my house. My neighbors are close enough I can see them so I don't feel isolated but far enough away that we all kinda mind our own business and let people live their lives how they want. And also we have sand dunes and salt flats.

  • @dewcodered88
    @dewcodered88 Год назад +278

    "but for most Oklahomans that's perfectly OK... Most people who live there are perfectly happier having fewer people nearby and a slower pace to life." That is well said! Very cool video :)

    • @loralarose9615
      @loralarose9615 Год назад +11

      Amen lol poor Okla homans 🤣😂that was funny I be happy everyone stayed out .

    • @theshanamaster
      @theshanamaster Год назад +9

      btw, its not (oh-sah-gae) its pronounced (oh-sage) XD that was hilarious because the way he says it is like how i say it to clown on my osage buddies XD

    • @michaellee3903
      @michaellee3903 Год назад +5

      I think a lot of the folks in the central states feel this way as well. North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma are states where most people don't want to move to and many of its residents like it that way. Just talk to any native of Dallas, Houston, Austin, and heck Phoenix how they feel about the rapid population growths over the past few decades. More crowds and more traffic induce a lot more stress.

    • @WilfBond55
      @WilfBond55 11 месяцев назад +4

      That slower pace of life was why I left after four years of ennui there. I liked the corporation that sent me there to help a struggling division, but it was no place for a single non-Baptist with a working brain. I've been back twice in the almost 40 years since I left.

    • @Therealtruth2005
      @Therealtruth2005 9 месяцев назад +1

      Fried bread

  • @ALsBlkLS
    @ALsBlkLS Год назад +327

    I live in Oklahoma and the last statement is true. Families don’t really leave Oklahoma and it’s almost a tight knit community. Every family has history of Indians and even my kids are registered Cherokee. Such an interesting state and glad to be here. Tulsa!

    • @spicytuna62
      @spicytuna62 Год назад +23

      Hey fellow Okie!
      I had dreams of moving to Colorado or Washington right after college, but I don't know...I grew up here. I've spent basically my whole life here. All my family is here. And Oklahoma is _filled_ with great people. It's kind of hard to leave this place.

    • @tophernuttle420
      @tophernuttle420 Год назад +10

      Everyone here is cherokee🤣
      I was just talking about Principal Chief Wilma Mankiller this morning!!!
      Even my fully white woman has her card somehow,its crazy fr...I think shes like two drops
      And i am two drops of Pawnee my family being and coming from there..
      (Sent from the Osage Rez)

    • @markharris524
      @markharris524 Год назад +20

      From OKC and know very few families that claim a “history of Indians”. I understand that it’s more prevalent than most any other area in the USA, but not “every family” at all.

    • @cobrachance1576
      @cobrachance1576 Год назад +37

      To be fair not everyone has a Native American background that lives in Oklahoma.

    • @jessicabecause3717
      @jessicabecause3717 Год назад +16

      I have generations in Oklahoma of family here and from West Virginia through Kentucky. No a lick of Indian blood in us.

  • @jackjumper4231
    @jackjumper4231 Год назад +38

    14:04 I live in Texas, and I have had many friends from Oklahoma and it is a prime example of how short distances can produce very different cultures.

  • @tkenietz
    @tkenietz Год назад +8

    Actually the western 1/3 of the state isn’t so much crop land. The land is hilly, rocky, rough terrain.
    The central 1/3 is where most of the farming is done. Pretty flat.
    The eastern 1/3 the hills pick up again, trees everywhere, rivers, creeks, etc.
    The eastern 1/3 and western 1/3 are like two different worlds.

  • @Pontybo
    @Pontybo 10 месяцев назад +152

    As a Oklahoman, I can confirm we did the best job to keep people out of our state :)

    • @joeshmoe-rl7bk
      @joeshmoe-rl7bk 9 месяцев назад +1

      ...you're very misguided and incorrect.....a majority of rental properties are owned by investors who don't live here.....they'll rent to ANYONE, including illegals......and the ones who grew up here outside of oil/ag aren't impressive.....uneducated, skill-less, looking more broken, drug addicted, homeless....what about the people who've grown up here?..the next generation coming up here is a disaster.....
      ....A dozen right wing factions that will never unify.......that issue has yet to surface......this state's actually looking more and more dismal.....drive through OKC.....

    • @bobburnitt5761
      @bobburnitt5761 8 месяцев назад +1

      You know, this URBAN SPRAWL and just building house and streets so one can build more Houses and Streets, is a Diminishing Returns set up. In Texas they are PAVING over all of the arable land with Concrete, and building LAKES on all of the prime Bottom Land that is really good farm land so the house buyers can Flush.. It is NOT sustainable. You cannot have Infinite Growth in a Finite place. Look at Arizona, for every 5 people that move in, three people move out, so they tell me.

    • @Cycology_Major
      @Cycology_Major 7 месяцев назад +11

      - "the best job keeping the *best* people out" too

    • @BrianDunncustomart
      @BrianDunncustomart 7 месяцев назад +11

      Exactly! Best go to Texas, we have nothing here (wink, wink). Not for people who don't appreciate nature or how to follow rules. Go to mesquite if you're looking for strip malls and restaurants

    • @jgringo5516
      @jgringo5516 7 месяцев назад +9

      As a Texan, I give you a 👍. Don’t blame ya’ll a’tall.

  • @davidfrost801
    @davidfrost801 Год назад +124

    When you mentioned The Port Facilities at Houston, I really thought you would mention The Port of Catoosa, the most inland Port with connections to the Sea in America. Nothing like Houston but so many are surprised as it's a little known fact.

    • @FracKen_A_Priv2
      @FracKen_A_Priv2 Год назад

      I can here to say the exact same thing.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulsa_Ports

    • @kd5inm
      @kd5inm Год назад +9

      Geoff don't know geography

    • @winterblitzen09
      @winterblitzen09 Год назад +5

      Yeah I was waiting for him to talk about it, and maybe the ports to plains corridor

  • @derekatkins4800
    @derekatkins4800 Год назад +54

    I’d like to add one correction to this video: Although its headquarters may be in Houston today, Phillips 66 was originally headquartered in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, which is located about 40 miles or so north of Tulsa. I’ve been to Bartlesville many times, since my mom lives there (it’s actually her hometown), and I’ve seen the house that the Phillips family lived in. A lot of history connected with Phillips 66 can be found in Bartlesville.

    • @jlrutube1312
      @jlrutube1312 Год назад +2

      Yes, I visited the Phillips family house in Bartlesville. I didn't know Phillips 66 moved to Houston. I wonder when that happened?

    • @derekatkins4800
      @derekatkins4800 Год назад +4

      @@jlrutube1312 I don’t know exactly when, but it happened when they merged with Conoco to become ConocoPhillips. That merger took place in 2002.

    • @erase_ego
      @erase_ego Год назад +1

      Bartlesville had just a Walmart until 2007 or so, No wonder Conocophillips moved out their HQ to HOuston

    • @sgtrock68
      @sgtrock68 Год назад +2

      I think damn near all oil companies that are 100 years old now got their start HQ in Tulsa. To me when i say that I mean from Ponca City, Pawhuska(RIP Rick Holt) Bartlesville, and Tulsa. I think my dad worked for most of them and his dad worked for 1 or 2 them because back in the beginning oil hands had value. Drillers would do anything they needed to keep employees happy and keep them for life. Not so much anymore.

    • @008Birdman
      @008Birdman 6 месяцев назад

      @@jlrutube1312Conoco & Phillips merged in 2002. Since then the hq was moved to Houston, then in 2012 split from ConocoPhillips into 2 seperate companies, ConocoPhillips, an exclusive E&P company and Phillips 66 a downstream refining, marketing, & pipeline company. I started at Phillips Petroleum in 99 and stayed with ConocoPhillips in 2012 ever since.

  • @davidjackson7281
    @davidjackson7281 Год назад +206

    You may have cared to mention that there was a significant amount of immigration from Oklahoma during the 30's dust bowl era and WW2 in the 40's when the population decreased by over 60,000 or 8%.

    • @jljordan1
      @jljordan1 Год назад +3

      He always omits a lot of information from his videos. Wikipedia would have probably been more accurate.

    • @davidjackson7281
      @davidjackson7281 Год назад

      @@jljordan1Funny that was exactly where the population figures came from.

    • @randalburris665
      @randalburris665 Год назад +14

      Will Rogers once said that when the Okies moved to California during the Dust Bowl, it raised the IQ of both states

    • @coynichols3517
      @coynichols3517 Год назад +2

      That would explain why the panhandle and much of northwestern Oklahoma is so sparsely populated as those were the areas that Oklahoma was affected. The rest of the state didn’t see any effect.

    • @davidjackson7281
      @davidjackson7281 Год назад

      @@randalburris665That's very funny. Thanks. May have heard that a long time ago. When I worked with Okies and Texans in the 70's the Okies would tease the Texans by saying the definition of a Texan was a 'wetback' who hadn't made it to Oklahoma.

  • @61wayne
    @61wayne Год назад +5

    I grew up in Bell Gardens Calif, In the Los Angles County , it was nick named back in the day Billy Goat Acres because the dust bowel brought a lot of Okies and Arkie's in.

    • @peggybarton232
      @peggybarton232 8 дней назад

      @@61wayne. now,, Californians are leaving California for Oklahoma cause of economic and liberal values... I know at least 5 people who moved here from California...

  • @yno7396
    @yno7396 Год назад +46

    The thing is, a lot of grads who graduate from OU / OSU find that all the jobs are in Dallas. It’s the reason you see so many Oklahomans have to move to Texas.

    • @TheRedStateBlue
      @TheRedStateBlue 5 месяцев назад +6

      Texas teachers are paid better. yet another reason why Oklahoma's education system is next to last in the nation.

    • @Saekaichan
      @Saekaichan 4 месяца назад

      Texas is very similar in culture and they also pay a lot more. The only people who move back are ones who have made enough money or family to afford it.

    • @michaelcoy8625
      @michaelcoy8625 3 месяца назад +2

      .....GET to move

    • @yno7396
      @yno7396 3 месяца назад +2

      @@michaelcoy8625 …HAVE to or no jobs

    • @Truthseeker-cv2mvp
      @Truthseeker-cv2mvp Месяц назад

      ​@@michaelcoy8625no no, its certainly HAVE to move, in that scenario. Texas is getting to be less and less of a good place to be with every Californian that moves there. That's why 95% of native Texans do not want Californians moving there. Not hard to understand why. These people get cali all fucked up then want to move to Texas just to vote for the same type of nonsense that ran them out of cali. Absolutely STUPID folks.

  • @bryang9601
    @bryang9601 3 месяца назад +4

    Lived 10’years in Stillwater OK and loved it - worked for KICKER, so that was a HUGE plus!!!

  • @Confusione_Infinito_Absurdum
    @Confusione_Infinito_Absurdum Год назад +267

    Odd fact: Oklahoma is slightly bigger and more populous than the entire country of Uruguay.

    • @normanclatcher
      @normanclatcher Год назад +16

      So, they might stand more of a chance against the kangaroo invasion?

    • @theSparkyWatts
      @theSparkyWatts Год назад +5

      It’s like 9x larger than Israel

    • @homefartsnic
      @homefartsnic Год назад +4

      Everything Is BIGger in Texas 👀💯

    • @lifebeyondthesalary2458
      @lifebeyondthesalary2458 Год назад +5

      @@homefartsnic INCLUDING the bugs 🤣

    • @alec_f1
      @alec_f1 Год назад +7

      And it has more tornados and women incarcerated in that area than just about any other.

  • @ganapatikamesh
    @ganapatikamesh Год назад +24

    I’m impressed with how much you fit into a 14 minute video that still manages to answer the question you posed. You gave a brief history of Oklahoma and Texas followed by where it the two states are today. As someone born and raised in Oklahoma, but has family that lives all over the US (including in Texas), I think you did a great job! Obviously if someone wanted to dive deeper into the history or other reasons you cite for either state, then they could find resources that provides more information.
    Thanks for making and sharing this video! I enjoy your channel and videos! I wasn’t expecting this video, but happy you made it!

    • @brendatomlinson
      @brendatomlinson Год назад +1

      Thanks for your positive feedback on what I think is a great video! I’m frankly disappointed in all the criticisms.

  • @aaronwilbanks6269
    @aaronwilbanks6269 Год назад +61

    Phillips 66, Conoco, Haliburton, and Kerr McGee were all headquartered and developed in Oklahoma. Over the past 25 years, they one by one all moved to Houston, mostly because of no state income taxes but also for other reasons. People want to cram into one place for some reason. I do not feel that Dallas and Houston are good places to live any longer. The quality of life is lacking. Too many sheep following the herd.

    • @alec_f1
      @alec_f1 Год назад +10

      Walmart made fun of those corporations for citing that they were just too big for Oklahoma anymore. I believe they said, "yeah, that's why we stayed in Bentonville."

    • @maureenstevens6824
      @maureenstevens6824 Год назад +1

      Austin also.

    • @aaronwilbanks6269
      @aaronwilbanks6269 Год назад +1

      Yes, Austin also. It got too big too fast.

    • @melissamassey8536
      @melissamassey8536 11 месяцев назад +2

      For one Okie that lived in the DFW Metroplex for 20 years, it was nice coming back home.

    • @daqcraig
      @daqcraig 6 месяцев назад

      And Kerr McGee was acquired by Anadarko Petroleum and relocated to Houston. Anadarko petroleum was also had its corp offices in Oklahoma.

  • @michaellee3903
    @michaellee3903 Год назад +7

    As someone from the northeast I would lean far more to moving to either the Dallas or Houston metro areas for job opportunities, but Oklahoma's big appeal is that home prices are still relatively cheap even compared to Texas. My only hesitation is having to deal with tornadoes (ugh).

    • @18andlikeit
      @18andlikeit 11 месяцев назад +2

      Even if you live in the heart of tornado Alley the chance of your house getting a direct hit by a tornado is miniscule.

    • @Cycology_Major
      @Cycology_Major 7 месяцев назад

      The Tornado Alley has actually drifted eastbound into Arkansas. Still get them but maybe not as many.
      Tulsa's culture & cuisine (Jewish deli, Asian...) scene is of exponentially higher quality in the past several years, too. TG!

    • @EvelynElaineSmith
      @EvelynElaineSmith 24 дня назад

      Both Oklahoma & Texas are located in "Tornado Alley"!

    • @Whinny40SW
      @Whinny40SW 8 дней назад

      @@Cycology_Major 152 tornadoes in Oklahoma last year, with an average of 58. Most of the state is still tornado alley, which has expanded, not moved.

  • @excat
    @excat 4 месяца назад +13

    One of my favorite things about living in Oklahoma is when you meet people online, I've had people literally ask if all our roads are dirt roads still and even if we drive cars here. I play along and tell them how bad and archaic we are around here so they stay away. My internet is powered by candle power and messenger birds :)

    • @silverbackag9790
      @silverbackag9790 3 месяца назад

      @@excat to be fair, I’d rather drive on most gravel roads than some of your alls turnpikes and other interstates. Mid to east Oklahoma is known for its lakes, but I don’t think they meant that it should include the roads.

    • @lmnatez5099
      @lmnatez5099 2 месяца назад +1

      I've upgraded my internet to campfires and smoke signals.

    • @rudestbeast4907
      @rudestbeast4907 2 месяца назад

      my image of OK is jetskis and drag races

    • @Miettes-ti2oj
      @Miettes-ti2oj Месяц назад

      Yeah, living in central Tulsa I WISH our roads were dirt roads. Dirt roads wouldn't have the 6 foot wide 2 foot deep POT HOLES the gov't of worthless wasteland Oklee-ignert-homee keeps paying $1.300.000+ to 're-pave' every year then never actually does anything about it. While some Oklee-ignert-homee counties still send their kids to school only FOUR DAYS A WEEK! What a hellhole. I don't personally believe the US is a failure, but ANYONE looking at Oklee-ignert-homee as an example would have to believe that the US system is a failure.

    • @kellykim7246
      @kellykim7246 Месяц назад

      lol I told an online friend that we mainly get around by horse and they believed me.

  • @billybilly3777
    @billybilly3777 Год назад +32

    Oklahoma has good and bad like nearly every place. I've lived here a long time and if it weren't for my wife's family I'd have been gone a long time ago. Mostly it's the weather. Hot, cold and windy to an extreme. There are numerous days every year that otherwise would be nice but for the wind. Poverty is rampant too. Impoverished people don't keep property up. High obesity and bad health abounds. Don't shoot the messenger.

    • @kirkbradford5765
      @kirkbradford5765 Год назад +8

      Weather here is AWESOME!! WTF are you talking abOUt!! Windy??? No wind issues either!! Poverty is everywhere and where do you live?? High obesity is everywhere also mayb go to the local gym and hang OUt be around that crowd dude!!

    • @tflick41
      @tflick41 Год назад +5

      "Poverty is rampant too. Impoverished people don't keep property up. High obesity and bad health abounds." @billybilly3777 You really need to get out more! 🙄

    • @paulamackey2905
      @paulamackey2905 Год назад +3

      That’s why we caint never leave

    • @18andlikeit
      @18andlikeit 11 месяцев назад +5

      Rampant poverty in Oklahoma? Come to Skid Row in LA where 52 city blocks are covered in tents, filth and squalor. Homeless everywhere. You'd swear you were in some 3rd World country in Africa. San Francisco too.. I don't think you get out much!

    • @Grovestreet4lif3
      @Grovestreet4lif3 7 месяцев назад +3

      They didn’t like you shining the light on the darker side of our state. We also have a big drug problem between the meth and pills. Ignoring the issues won’t help solve them.

  • @anhvu-yp9vs
    @anhvu-yp9vs Год назад +88

    Correction: at 0:22, he says that the single city of Dallas has 7.6 million people. The city proper only has a population of 1.3 million people and the 7.6 million population is the entire DFW metroplex area.

    • @Damianoutlaw
      @Damianoutlaw Год назад +1

      Atlanta and Boston only have 500k Proper Residents while their metro areas are each between 6-7 million people. When people are talking about a metro area's population they typically only refer to the principal city.
      No one outside of the Dallas area really cares about Arlington, Ft Worth, Frisco...etc. To outsiders its just all Dallas.
      Same way in that people really don't care about the suburbs of massive cities like Atlanta, Boston, Dallas and Los Angeles.

    • @kd5inm
      @kd5inm Год назад

      Correct. Geoff is an id10t

    • @gr8myndmuzic
      @gr8myndmuzic Год назад +10

      Yup! It is the Metropolitan area that has over 7.6, actually over 8 million now in 2023. Dallas isn’t by itself. Fort Worth and Arlington are the other 2 major cities in the metro, in addition to several other smaller cities in the area. I live in Fort Worth, which is now the 12th or 13th largest city in the U.S., but most think the whole metro is Dallas if they’re not from here.

    • @anhvu-yp9vs
      @anhvu-yp9vs Год назад +4

      @@gr8myndmuzic yeah, i live in grand prairie and can relate 😭

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад +6

      @@gr8myndmuzic That’s because of Kennedy. They don’t know that the bulk of the population is in the northern suburbs. Collin and Denton Counties are growing like mushrooms, with the latter finally being to catch on like the former, Trends do not last but it is now being projected that in 50 years DFW will be the largest metro in the USA.

  • @magellanicspaceclouds
    @magellanicspaceclouds Год назад +80

    I've been to Oklahoma. Seemed peaceful and quiet. Exactly the way I like it.

    • @tflick41
      @tflick41 Год назад +7

      good people are always welcome!

    • @zachiga
      @zachiga 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@tflick41 You guys have my favorite little sand dune to ride motorcycles!
      I only come up to OK for dirt bikes, drifting and nature! You guys have it all in terms of stuff to do that isn’t night life!

  • @Ksane
    @Ksane 7 месяцев назад +7

    I've lived in Oklahoma 40 years. It's the tornadoes & wildfires that have done me in.

  • @de3182
    @de3182 4 месяца назад +2

    My family on both sides are from Oklahoma and I was born and raised here. We like how Oklahoma is less populated. It's so much less stressful. When we visit Texas it seems so chaotic. It's like my husband says, "Texas would be real nice if there wasn't so many Texans."

  • @Ghojh2466
    @Ghojh2466 Год назад +104

    I’m not native to Oklahoma but have recently called it home. Its geography is actually amazing when you consider all the variety of environments we have here! There’s the alabaster caverns with deposits of some of the rarest gypsum in the world! There’s sand dunes, the majestic witchita and quartz mountians and so much more!! That being said we do also have terrible infrastructure, parks n rec scandals/underfunding, and one of the worst superfund sites in picher!

    • @parnassus804
      @parnassus804 Год назад +16

      You should visit Broken Bow Lake, southeastern Ok. Near town of Broken Bow.
      Spring fed deep lake in a valley of small mountains. Very clear and coke year round All in logging lands. Pines year round. Life long resident and most beautiful location imho. Best of luck!

    • @cc23001
      @cc23001 Год назад +11

      @parnassus804 lol please delete those comment. We don't need our secrets getting out

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap Год назад +6

      You could visit the Hickory Oak forest in the Cross Timber area. Walk down the driveway and you can go from pure sand to pure clay to natural gravel to huge slabs of rock! We have marker trees around here, too. They were created from young trees to point the way to important trails or water sources.

    • @johnbyers961
      @johnbyers961 Год назад +6

      Agreed @@parnassus804 .. Not from here but been here nearly 35 Years and i've seen most parts of the state multiple times Luv Brokenbow area stayed @ beavers bend many times. I have seen a lot of the USA and must say Oklahoma is great . I consider myself a Naturalized Oklahoman and don't plan to ever leave =)

    • @alec_f1
      @alec_f1 Год назад +7

      Talk more about the lead contamination in Picher. We have to keep the weirdos out.

  • @karladoesstuff
    @karladoesstuff Год назад +178

    Osage is pronounced "O-sage" like sage the herb. Ouachita is pronounced "WASH-i-tah".

    • @Firguy_the_Foot_Fetishist
      @Firguy_the_Foot_Fetishist Год назад +2

      I doubt that. Almost every language is written phonetically so you know how to pronounce the word. The exception to this is English. I think it was always meant to be pronounced "Oh-Saw-Gey" because it comes from the word "𐓏𐓘𐓻𐓘𐓻𐓟 (wažáže)" but some White people thought the "Saw-gey" was meant to be said like the spice. It's like how "Anna Karenina" is called "Anna Kuh-rin-nuh-nuh" in English (because native speakers can't get into phonetics) when the name is much prettier when you say "Ah-nah Kah-Reh-Nii-Nah" like it's supposed to be said.

    • @BootyEahter
      @BootyEahter Год назад

      ​@Firfag you're wrong. It's written in English which is not a phonetic language.

    • @tmrobertson
      @tmrobertson Год назад +7

      ​@@Firguy_the_Foot_Fetishist ž is the voiced sibilant, like the last syllable in "mirage". "Osage" came from how the French explorers/trappers in the 17th Century were able to pronounce "𐓏𐓘𐓻𐓘𐓻𐓟 (wažáže)", "Osage" rhyming with "mirage". English-speaking settlers later interpreted it as rhyming with "page", in line with most French loanwords (especially prior to North American colonization).
      Also you're completely wrong about Anna Karenina - the "Anna Kuh-rin-nuh-nuh" is much closer to the Russian, which is more like "AH-na Kuh-RYEN-yihn-uh". Her husband's name is "Karenin", after all.

    • @moonpearl666
      @moonpearl666 Год назад +19

      Learned how to pronounce all these words from natives, actually. It's Oh Sage. :)

    • @Gamepro2112
      @Gamepro2112 Год назад +21

      @@Firguy_the_Foot_Fetishist I’m going to take the word of the leaders of the Osage nation and since they were at one point my bosses I’ll let you know they do not pronounce it like how it was in this video. The original commenter is correct about how the actual people pronounce their name.

  • @devenestes3234
    @devenestes3234 Год назад +60

    Just a quick note on your list of petroleum companies headquartered in Texas. Actually Phillips and Conoco were both headquartered in Oklahoma (Phillips being started in Oklahoma and Conoco moving to OK in 1929). So during the formative years of the states history (Conoco moved HQ to Houston sometime mid century, Phillips stuck around quite a bit longer than that). But neither headquarters was in a major urban center in OK. Maybe that made it less attractive? Or the presence of the port and reserves in Houston was also surely a factor.

    • @777stroke
      @777stroke Год назад +15

      Also Halliburton started in Duncan Oklahoma by Erle P. Halliburton. Did not move headquarters until after he had passed away.

    • @ochem123
      @ochem123 Год назад

      @@777strokeI’m from Oklahoma; My grandfather David Kennedye, said that Halliburton stole a patent from his grandfather, Charles Benton “Boots” Kennedye the First. He was so nicknamed for the Boots he always wore. My father’s maternal half-brother, Charles Benton Kennedye the Second, also goes by the name “Boots” Kennedye, although I’ve never seen him wear boots. My Uncle Boots is a Kiowa Native American documentary filmmaker and has accrued 10 Emmys so far. Check them out! I’ve always wondered if I should look into the Halliburton patent thing. Thanks for sharing that info about Halliburton in Duncan, OK; I didn’t know that! God bless you! 😊 🔥 ♥️

    • @alec_f1
      @alec_f1 Год назад +5

      It was Phillips that said they were too big and needed to move to a bigger city. The Walton family joked how Walmart felt the same way, and that was why they were in the vast metropolis of Bentonville Arkansas.

  • @MCCheddars53
    @MCCheddars53 Год назад +3

    Enjoyed the video- wanted to point out an error towards the end.
    Oklahoma actually DOES have a large port to call its own. In fact it has the largest inland port in the contigious united states, the port of catoosa in catoosa, ok (near tulsa) . This is important to local business and industries- using the arkansas river you can connect to the mississippi and make your way to the ocean.
    Just wanted to point that one out! We even have a rowing/crew club that rows and has a boathouse out there

  • @golffoxtrotyankee
    @golffoxtrotyankee 18 дней назад +4

    For years Oklahoma license plates said "Oklahoma is OK"...not good, not great, not even wonderful...just OK.

  • @jerrycaughman6324
    @jerrycaughman6324 Год назад +80

    Thanks for highlighting my home state in your vid. Most folks outside Oklahoma have no idea how diverse our geography is. We have a little bit of everything and it makes life fun and interesting. We as Oklahomans have a million day trips we can take before we get bored inside our state.

    • @ba2724
      @ba2724 Год назад +4

      To be fair, I got bored and chose to leave OK for greener pastures. But that's just me. I still visit from time to time.

    • @OkieJammer2736
      @OkieJammer2736 Год назад +9

      I totally agree with your day trips mention. A proud Okie myself, there is so much to see and do if you enjoy the arts, festivals, beautiful landscapes, history and lots of lakes, fishing, camping etc. And we absolutely appreciate the fact that more folks move to Texas than here...

    • @Robert._.j.Oppenheimer
      @Robert._.j.Oppenheimer 7 месяцев назад

      There’s plains, mountains, and a desert. I love my state

    • @JB-dy9bl
      @JB-dy9bl 7 месяцев назад

      @@ba2724 we're glad you left. You sound vaxxed and quadruple boosted.

  • @johngaither9263
    @johngaither9263 Год назад +72

    As a child my relatives in Pennsylvania asked me questions about living in Oklahoma. One question was how I got to school. "I walked" was my answer. They then asked, "but what about the Indians"? "They walk to" I replied. These same relatives on a driving trip to California from Pennsylvania told my parents Oklahoma was too far away for a visit.

    • @nd4539
      @nd4539 Год назад +14

      Ehh they did you guys a favor. There’s something wrong with the water in PA… best everyone who lives there just stays there 😄

    • @coynichols3517
      @coynichols3517 Год назад +4

      I’ve heard people tell that same exact story before and I have a hard time believing anyone could possibly think that Oklahoma is like that in this modern age.

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад +2

      My wife is from West Virginia,.After ww2 Her mother and dad drove from there all the way to Mexico and back in an old car. I marveled at that because in 1960 I took a similar route from East Texas to DC and back. That was a hard trip because they are not rich.

    • @dwightanderson8331
      @dwightanderson8331 Год назад +8

      People can be judgemental and ignorant all at once.

    • @StuStevens-rn7rb
      @StuStevens-rn7rb Год назад

      LOL!! 😂

  • @jimpense5370
    @jimpense5370 Год назад +26

    Osage is pronounced "0h-sage (sage like the plant)" Also, Conoco-Phillips and Phillips 66 ARE Oklahoma companies. Along with Sinclair, Skelly, DX, etc. Tulsa is what it is because of its location on the Arkansas River, and its proximity to the oil fields of the Glenn Pools, and the Osage Nation. Surprised you didn't mention that Guthrie, Oklahoma was the original capital city, until the seal was moved to OKC.

    • @Handyman1911
      @Handyman1911 Год назад +1

      He didn’t know…not very well researched when average Oklahomans can write and pronounce the script better than the ‘expert.’

    • @robcobi
      @robcobi Год назад +3

      Made me laugh, you're likely not going to pronounce a lot of Oklahoma stuff like we do though, Miami, Gotebo, Vici, Boise City, Checotah (maybe Carrie Underwood helped with this one), Hobert, Chickasha even. OMG just remembered the new announcer saying Eufaula on KFOR, not an Okie! Also Bokchito and Durant.
      Lmfao OUICHITA is just as bad... love it!

  • @chh3781
    @chh3781 Год назад +2

    We have an inland port via the Arkansas River. There’s lots of barges that go to the Mississippi River from there.

  • @Anubisdream1
    @Anubisdream1 Год назад +3

    Not a large coastal port. But we do have an inland river port. Port of Catoosa. So we aren’t completely landlocked to cargo ships.

  • @Zotty1959
    @Zotty1959 Год назад +24

    I feel like you forgot a very imported small town. Cushing has the largest oil tank farm in the world that's why they call it "Pipeline Crossroad of the World"

    • @dwightanderson8331
      @dwightanderson8331 Год назад +1

      They are about to start building a refinery there. The previous ones have been gone for many years. My in laws live by where one used to be on the west edge of town.

    • @reginablack1320
      @reginablack1320 Год назад +2

      Love me some Cushing!

    • @topguniceman14
      @topguniceman14 9 дней назад

      No one calls it that

  • @oldsilver6035
    @oldsilver6035 Год назад +38

    Tulsa claimed the Oil Capital until the move of several oil and gas corporations to Houston. I remember Texaco's move because I was a temporary employed by them in downtown Tulsa. Something about being raided by T Boone Pickens and moving everything to Houston. I got a permanent job eventually with the Williams Companies.

    • @larrypinkston1448
      @larrypinkston1448 Год назад +11

      A good portion of the oil companies he listed as being headquartered in Houston were originally Oklahoma (specifically Tulsa and Ponca City) companies.

    • @schoolForAnts
      @schoolForAnts Год назад +1

      According to my petroleum accountant mother, the real oil capital was Sapulpa, but a Tulsan put it on a bigger billboard lol

    • @JasonNichols75
      @JasonNichols75 Год назад +4

      Yeah, I think it's Duncan that was where Halliburton started. I remember when Phillips 66 moved to Texas. It was a bitter pill to swallow, as it was the final (or at least most obvious) example of the departure of the oil companies in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад +2

      Pickens was a modern day pirate. Friends of my dad hated him because he would never keep his promises.

    • @Roastbeef88420
      @Roastbeef88420 Год назад +1

      Tulsa is the toilet bowl of Oklahoma

  • @cdg0219
    @cdg0219 Год назад +10

    In 1900, when Dallas was becoming an industrial hub, Tulsa had 1,300 people and OKC had around 10,000. I think it’s pretty remarkable there are now two metro areas with populations over 1 million, and despite Oklahoma’s bad reputation they both have solid growth rates, even with DFW’s magnetic effect to young professionals.

  • @alexadams4132
    @alexadams4132 Год назад +7

    I was a previous resident of the state of Oklahoma. I can say there are several reasons why its population is so small. First off, its initial population was low to began with it being indian territory and the dust bowl. A large reason is lack of multiple major industries in the state other than oil and gas. There really isn't much else there to make money. A high percentage of people who live there do have money but they choose not to spend it. They sit on it, all the while fighting growth. Oklahoman's don't care about the rest of the world or the nation only their own state. It is very tight group of people and most never leave the state. On top of all that, the weather is incredibly unpredictable and when it happens, it mostly destroys the landscape. Tornadoes, floods, ice storms, and constant heavy winds. All make for a very unpleasant way of life.

    • @ef5hunter
      @ef5hunter 4 месяца назад +1

      As a native Oklahoman, I can tell you that this description of Oklahoma weather is very overdone. Yes, there is bad weather at times. But isn't that true just about everywhere? Didn't Houston, TEXAS receive 50 inches of rain in 3 or 4 days with Hurricane Harvey?

  • @MrTourgeFlexington
    @MrTourgeFlexington 11 месяцев назад +5

    I lived in Oklahoma City for eight years. The state is very affordable and a good place to raise a family, but it is extremely dull.
    There’s a very good reason it was mostly ignored, and simply a pass through for most of the United States early existence.

  • @unluckycharms9017
    @unluckycharms9017 Год назад +32

    Oklahoman here. There’s a very good chance Oklahoma was visited by the Vikings before the Europeans. Look up the Heavener Rune stone. Can’t remember what it was dated to but it was definitely before 1500. There’s several other rune stones that have been found too.

    • @alec_f1
      @alec_f1 Год назад

      No, the Heavener Rune Stone has been proved a fake. I thought it was cool until I saw that it was dated to like the early 20th century. There were a rash of fakes done in Minnesota by Scandinavians there also.

    • @unluckycharms9017
      @unluckycharms9017 Год назад +1

      @@Donley76 References as to where? Cause no.

    • @mgs85
      @mgs85 Год назад +3

      That’s widely known these days. It was made by 19th century migrants and settlers. You seem to be on the internet so I’m puzzled why you just don’t any cursory search on it, it’s easy.

    • @JB-dy9bl
      @JB-dy9bl 7 месяцев назад

      @@mgs85 you mean using Googles wonderfully idiotic AI that uses idiotic and unfounded Reddit posts as its source?? 😂👍No thanks and your info is wrong. Are you referencing wikilinks or what, Einstein?

    • @mgs85
      @mgs85 7 месяцев назад

      @@JB-dy9bl Did Trump cause that brain rot or was it there before? Am I talking to one of these infamous Q-Anon idiots? Wonderful...

  • @2314asfadsf23
    @2314asfadsf23 Год назад +32

    I believe you missed a very important factor to the lack of population in Oklahoma, being the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. Over 440,000 people migrated out of Oklahoma during this time due to the weather. The dust bowl was a natural and manmade event. Abnormally die (natural) which over farming/over tilling (manmade) destroying the natural grass lands leaving a desert, more or less. Another huge drop happened in the mid 1980s during the "oil glut". Both events could be responsible for 2-4 million people today with birth rates alone (At these times). So, if these events didn't happen Oklahoma's population could now potentially be 6-8 million people.

    • @tamiefoster4072
      @tamiefoster4072 6 месяцев назад +2

      VERY true, good catch, I lived thru the 70s issue, my gma lived thru the dust bowl, yes we have port of Catoosa, the Virdigris river

    • @james-d8k
      @james-d8k 4 месяца назад

      Very funny you blame Oklahoma's population on something that happened around 70 years ago lol as if in 70 years if there was anything here worth a shit here that would not have been corrected
      , don't you think what happened in the 30s would have no effect 70 years later, unless the truth is Oklahoma sucks at everything.

    • @marktwain2053
      @marktwain2053 3 месяца назад +1

      What most people don't understand though, is that the dust didn't come FROM Oklahoma, it blew in from the Eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains, Texas, New Mexico, even parts of Nevada, and Southern California.
      That's why it would build up to 10+ feet deep in some areas.
      Most of the soil in Oklahoma is a rich red clay, but since the Dust Bowl Days, some places now have several feet of sand covering it.

  • @steveanderson9290
    @steveanderson9290 Год назад +34

    I'm near Paris TX just south of eastern Oklahoma, and I have always been astounded at how severe weather seems to favor Oklahoma. It is often clear here, but if I look north, I can see thunderstorms pummeling poor Oklahoma. It's like mother nature is perpetually annoyed with it and often beats the daylights out of everything north of the Red River. It's an interesting phenomenon. I suppose it it no accident that the National Weather Service located it's headquarters in Norman.

    • @paulamitchell880
      @paulamitchell880 Год назад +4

      I have cush chairs in my shelter, a fan, and an AM radio, too. It is kept clean to use at a moments notice.

    • @Betterlattethannever307
      @Betterlattethannever307 Год назад +10

      I live in Moore. My shelter has a carpet, pillows, fans, and led lights ready to go too.
      Many of us who live in OK are amateur meteorologists: super cell, mesocyclone, cap, in-flow notch, hook echo, gate to gate, reflectivity vs velocity radar modes, hail core, power flashes, debris cloud, etc. are all common terms. Our meteorologists here are top notch, we usually get a couple days warning that we may have a bad tornado day…multiple spotters will be in the field and even a helicopter spotting. They can tell us usually down to the street name the tornado is on.

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад

      True.

    • @alec_f1
      @alec_f1 Год назад +7

      Yes, we are a wasteland of severe weather. Tornados will get you eventually, you won't escape being sucked off the face of the earth or killed by lightning or a flood.

    • @lisstyler9078
      @lisstyler9078 Год назад +6

      If you don't like crazy weather then Oklahoma is probably not for you. I was born in Washita and now live in Tornado alley. I have been in 2 tornados, one in Washita (about 52 years ago) and just this last April, near Norman.
      We have droughts, we have some snow but mostly ice storms, it can rain for a week straight, we have high winds, no winds, high humidity, no humidity and we can also have all of these in a 24-48 period. So Oklahoma is not for everyone 😊

  • @JaeElroy
    @JaeElroy 17 дней назад +1

    lived in southern Ok all my life. My family has lived here for at least 150 years. They were Chickasaw. After the trail of tears they mov r d from Tishomingo to Comanche. My grandmother was born in Comanche, IT, Indian Territory.

  • @MsHelene26
    @MsHelene26 5 месяцев назад

    Hi ! French curious girl here. Your video is soooo good. Synthetic, with all the main geography and history informations. Love it 🤩🤓

  • @kjhuang
    @kjhuang Год назад +36

    Thank you for doing this video! And thank you for giving Oklahoma the credit it deserves for its natural variety and colorful history! I've seen this Oklahoma and Texas comparison pop up on a few other channels, and as a former resident of both states I'm always glad to see them.
    I love both states but there was a reason I chose one over the other. When I was leaving Stillwater, Oklahoma in 2016, I was originally planning on moving to Oklahoma City but I moved to Austin instead. I just need bigger and livelier cities, and Texas has that over Oklahoma.
    Comparing their growth and development, the importance of oil in Texas can't be overstated. Texas was a sparsely populated backwater until oil was discovered in the early 1900s. All that oil money financed the building of education and infrastructure and helped Texas diversify into other industries too. I guess Oklahoma is playing catch up now.
    That said, I do foresee that Oklahoma will boom and Texas will fade over the coming decades. The reason, of course, is the same reason for any other place: housing costs. The future of the United States is people being priced out and moving from one cheaper refuge to the next, and I see Oklahoma receiving the hordes of financially struggling people desperately fleeing Texas, Florida, and Colorado (after having already fled California, New York, and Washington of course).

    • @susancook1448
      @susancook1448 Год назад +8

      Really doubt that. Oklahoma is a poor state and their education system is in bad shape. Despite lower housing most parents will not choose that. Texans are very proud of their state and unlikely to move to OK.

    • @ReviewedByAndy
      @ReviewedByAndy Год назад +7

      @@susancook1448Tulsa and OKC are very affordable and have several wealthy and high end suburbs.

    • @dale-z7p
      @dale-z7p Год назад +9

      I really wish you would tell the 12 different families from Texas that just moved in within 3 miles of me in Oklahoma that people from Texas won’t move here! lol! I’m joking they are great people but to say nobody from Texas is moving to Oklahoma is a joke. They are coming in droves to all areas of the state.

    • @coynichols3517
      @coynichols3517 Год назад +10

      @@susancook1448Oklahoma is not a poor state in comparison to a lot of other Southern states around it. And trust me, plenty of Texans are moving here. Californians too, driving the housing cost way too high.

    • @coynichols3517
      @coynichols3517 Год назад +2

      @@ReviewedByAndyyes, there is A LOT of money in OK. Old oil money and new money.

  • @vanhouten64
    @vanhouten64 Год назад +13

    If you go from Texas straight north through Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and North Dakota, each successive state has a smaller population.

    • @austinstratman1809
      @austinstratman1809 Год назад +1

      If you are a native Texan, we're all the same! Doesn't matter which part of the State you are from.

  • @sisleymichael
    @sisleymichael Год назад +10

    I spent lots of time in Oklahome during my Army career. I love Oklahoma. I retired in Texas as I am a native Texan. I have lots of friends there and we visit several times a year.

    • @Roastbeef88420
      @Roastbeef88420 Год назад +3

      Fort sill?

    • @sisleymichael
      @sisleymichael Год назад +2

      @@Roastbeef88420 Yes. Hunting, fishing, all things outdoor available. It is like living in the country. For a country boy like me, it was a good fit.

  • @shpankey
    @shpankey Год назад +2

    Small correction. Osage nation is pronounced: Oh - Sage (sage as in the herb) or like Stage (but without the T). The people of Oklahoma are most definitely tight nit by comparison to the rest of the county. We are all very proud of ALL our people and especially our state. Everyone I know loves living here. p.s might want to mention the Tornados here, for the outsiders.

  • @AthenaWeaver
    @AthenaWeaver Год назад +2

    Thank you for pointing out that we're a cross corner for the different regions. I have always been confused when Oklahoma is referred to as a southern state, especially having lived in Oklahoma City most of my life where most people have a Midwestern accent that occasionally might have a southern draw. Of course, relatives from smaller, rural towns sound like a cross between Appalachian and southern. And the annoying and obstinate mispronunciation of certain names, like the one my family is from ... Alex, pronounced Alec (maybe its more of a country of origin issue where x's were pronounced like ck). Anyway, no hard feelings to my fellow Okies who like that little quirk. :) Like many, when I was young, I wanted to leave. But having driven in Dallas a few times, I wouldn't trade being here for being in a larger city.

  • @ronriesinger7755
    @ronriesinger7755 Год назад +13

    Tulsa does have the farthest inland port in the country. Also, Conoco and Phillips were Oklahoma companies that eventually moved to Houston.

  • @HombreWithAnOmbre
    @HombreWithAnOmbre Год назад +11

    Without watching the video I will say I left oklahoma (tulsa) due to poverty, painfully cold winters and unbearably hot summers, not much to do, lack of diversity, racial segregation, poor education, high crime rate.
    I moved to Dallas Texas one year ago and it changed my life forever and for the better. Everything I worked so hard for in oklahoma for 10 years I got in 1 year in dallas.
    I will never move back to tulsa but it is My native Land
    Oklahoma isn't all bad but sometimes the grass is greener else where

  • @osu9400
    @osu9400 Год назад +7

    I love oklahoma but I see the lure of Texas for sure in these items
    1. Oklahoma can have brutal winters. If you don't like cold, then you will leave.
    2. TUL airport is nice with several direct flights, but it's not a giant hub like DFW
    3. Jobs! Texas cities have done an amazing job recruiting large companies to work. Oklahoma has several nice corps, but not nearly as many as DFW or HOU
    4. Texas wouldn't have these corps if wasn't for their heavy investment in infrastructure. They are proactive with building giant roads where they expect growth to occur.
    5. No income taxes. Again, this is very attractive for corps to open shop here.

    • @brendatomlinson
      @brendatomlinson Год назад +1

      You nailed it perfectly! Everything you said.

    • @WilfBond55
      @WilfBond55 8 месяцев назад +2

      Cold? Oklahoma has nothing on the upper Midwest in that department. It's colder than Texas, but not nearly as cold as the Dakotas, Minnesota, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Michigan, etc. It's the wind that gets you.

    • @MaBerryHomestead
      @MaBerryHomestead 5 месяцев назад

      No income tax, are you sure? Or no state tax, those are different taxes...

    • @osu9400
      @osu9400 5 месяцев назад

      @@MaBerryHomestead Texas does not have state income tax.

    • @bleachsanchoblastk
      @bleachsanchoblastk 4 месяца назад

      ​@WilfBond55 it's not so much the actual temperature it's the wind. It's cutting. Most of the time we get winter precipitation it's in the form of freezing rain and sleet which clings to the trees and powerlines. There's a lot of rural land so it can take quite a while to get things repaired. Also houses here are mainly built to deal with the heat not the cold. All of that contributes to the harshness of winter significantly.

  • @rangerdanger766
    @rangerdanger766 Год назад +5

    If you like rural outdoor life Ok. has so much more to offer. Plus its surprisingly pretty in alot of parts

    • @keinyoda
      @keinyoda 4 месяца назад

      When lived in Dallas we would head to Oklahoma for camping and nice parks

  • @KsSpOiLeDBrAt
    @KsSpOiLeDBrAt 4 месяца назад +1

    I just moved to Oklahoma and honestly it’s better that it’s not an over crowded state. I came from a heavy crowded state/city. The traffic here is beautiful compared to where we came from.

  • @carsonwilson4542
    @carsonwilson4542 Год назад +26

    I live in the panhandle. I am also a geography teacher in the panhandle. I may be using this video soon. Thanks for this.

    • @kd5inm
      @kd5inm Год назад

      Please don't use this video. Its full of mistakes and omissions. Geoff doesn't know geography. He can't pronounce names correctly and he doesn't know Oklahoma has an ocean port.

  • @angle_animations
    @angle_animations Год назад +100

    Glad being a part of the 4 million amazing Oklahomans

    • @edjohnston6216
      @edjohnston6216 Год назад +2

      I can't remember the date, but I do know it was before Columbus by a couple of hundred years.

    • @Dillon_dose_stuff
      @Dillon_dose_stuff 4 месяца назад

      Same

  • @rylencason4420
    @rylencason4420 Год назад +27

    As a resident of both, here's my input. (Norman and Austin)
    1) Texas from the start was more advantageous than Oklahoma. Texas was a state far before Oklahoma was, and Oklahoma was designated as a tribal relocation ground for most of its history.
    2) Oklahoma has significantly more climatic extremes, having all of Texas's problems but also has a much colder winter. Not many people like cold winters and hot summers.
    3) Texas has a coast, Oklahoma does not.
    4) Oklahoma is way more culturally conservative than Texas is, and pretty much always has been. This is a turn off to companies and inhibits its economic growth.
    5) Oklahoma is closer to the Midwest than the South in culture and climate, which correlates to the same issues that the Midwest faces. Meanwhile Texas is in the South and it is experiencing the rewards of being in the Sun Belt.
    Overall: Texans stay in Texas please. We are fine how we are, we will still be here when your insane growth stops but we won't change a thing to accomodate you when you drive across the Red River.

    • @carljohnson317
      @carljohnson317 Год назад +1

      Texas is way bigger when your from there👀👎😂

    • @joedellinger9437
      @joedellinger9437 Год назад +5

      And Oklahoma owns ALL of the red river! The state border is the Southern bank of the river, not the middle.

    • @FireSideAfflictions
      @FireSideAfflictions Год назад

      Businesses like no state income tax- it has nothing to do with ‘conservative’. If anything, based on the exodus of people from liberal states and shit on the street cities business are leaving in droves from those criminal infested hell holes

    • @FireSideAfflictions
      @FireSideAfflictions Год назад +5

      I lived in the south for 14 years and I’m from Oklahoma. Oklahoma is more southern or just as souther as texas. especially in the north and south east corners of the state. Texas identifies as ‘Texas’ and is not all that ‘southern’

    • @carljohnson317
      @carljohnson317 Год назад

      Damn !

  • @NicDemo
    @NicDemo Год назад +2

    My houshold utterly erupted in chaotic yelling and laughter after he said "the Osah GAY" like it's japanese hahahhahahahaha wow

  • @charliebailey9587
    @charliebailey9587 Год назад +1

    Phillip 66 was founded and is still headquartered in Bartlesville, OK. Conoco merged with Phillips to become PhillipsConoco and their primary headquarters is in Houston, but they have a satellite headquarters in Bartlesville as well

  • @jerihartzell9300
    @jerihartzell9300 Год назад +19

    I'm from Oklahoma. The government does nothing to get jobs for their people. It's a cheap place to live, but the schools suck. We had no choice but to go to Texas to find jobs.

    • @jdwilmoth
      @jdwilmoth Год назад +6

      If you can't find a job in Oklahoma it's because you're not looking

    • @mr.b3591
      @mr.b3591 Год назад +7

      Jobs in OK are given to family members, relatives, and political favors. Outsider ? Hahaha., forget it. Only jobs none of thier family members or friends want will be offered to you, and if they change their mind... your gone. Say a word to one Oklahoman, you might as well be talking to their entire family. LOL

    • @jdwilmoth
      @jdwilmoth Год назад +3

      @@mr.b3591 there's more jobs here than there is people still come on with that crap

    • @KittyGrizGriz
      @KittyGrizGriz 7 месяцев назад

      Oklahoma/just like Texas has taken away women’s-girls healthcare & anonymity rights. They’re backwards states trying to take us back into the 1950s very dystopian and downright scary. It’s why many good doctors are leaving & not practicing obstetrics anymore- UGH.

    • @JB-dy9bl
      @JB-dy9bl 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@mr.b3591 correction: We dont employ liberal dbags...carry on.

  • @IntheTreesOK
    @IntheTreesOK Год назад +4

    Coming from Oklahoma I enjoyed this. The ending was well said. I’ve lived about half my life in okc. Okc huge. The amount of cities that have double the population , that you could fit into Okc is wild.

  • @GenericUsername1388
    @GenericUsername1388 Год назад +17

    As a non American i really enjoy this channel. You've taught me a lot about the US I would've otherwise never known 👍

    • @MadMonk67
      @MadMonk67 Год назад +4

      You can learn even more in the comments, detailing some of the inaccuracies. :)

    • @1foolishcaribou195
      @1foolishcaribou195 Год назад +2

      @@MadMonk67 "Some" of the inaccuracies? Did you mean "quite a bit" of the inaccuracies?

  • @wayne2k33
    @wayne2k33 6 месяцев назад

    Gréât vidéo! As an Arkansas native and current resident of Texas, 11:19 just one small thing. Instead of ‘Ouichita’ it’s actually ‘Ouachita’ pronounced Wash-ee-tah. The mountain range is shared between Arkansas and Oklahoma.

  • @DanoFSmith-yc9tg
    @DanoFSmith-yc9tg 6 месяцев назад +1

    Both Texas and Oklahoma, along with NewMexico and Colorado, are all such pretty states. I just road tripped through that area this past winter. I'd love to move to that area full time.

  • @rockyroad7345
    @rockyroad7345 Год назад +15

    Native Texan who grew up in far northern Oklahoma. It was a great place to live and I miss a lot about it (4 seasons but not tornadoes and constant wind), but I'm glad to be back home. My great, great grandparents moved to OK when it was still Indian Territory and are in the book of founding families of the state. My great great grandmother was Cherokee, but they lived in the Chickasaw area in southern OK near Ardmore. My mom was also born in OK, but they came to Texas during the dustbowl. It's a great state and I'll love it always.

  • @Hurricane0721
    @Hurricane0721 Год назад +25

    The vast majority of people in Oklahoma only live in a small portion of the state between the Tulsa metro and the Oklahoma City metro. The western half of Oklahoma is by and large very lightly populated, especially the closer you get to the High Plains and the Oklahoma Panhandle.

    • @sorrow_Sam
      @sorrow_Sam Год назад +1

      Even here in north east oklahoma my town has just over 1k people. The nearest city is either Springfield or tulsa which are both like an hour and a half away.

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад

      Not enough rain.

  • @francescathomas3502
    @francescathomas3502 Год назад +6

    I have often wondered where the Panhandle of Oklahoma came from. Thank you a wonderful and interesting History lesson!!!

  • @daqcraig
    @daqcraig 6 месяцев назад +1

    Conoco originated in Ponca city Oklahoma and Phillips originated in Bartlesville Oklahoma and Halliburton originated in Duncan Oklahoma. Conoco and Phillips merged and are located in Houston. Halliburton also relocated its corporate campus to Houston but maintains a presence in Duncan Oklahoma. I do business in both Oklahoma and Texas. Many of Oklahoma's best businesses relocated to Texas several years ago for a variety of reasons.

  • @lisaquigley-moon9583
    @lisaquigley-moon9583 7 месяцев назад +2

    I lived in Texas off & on my whole life and I’ve spent the last 20+ years living in Tulsa Oklahoma. It’s a nice state. I enjoy it, but I’d much rather be in Texas.

  • @johncameron
    @johncameron Год назад +11

    This is a great way to compare the two: I grew up in Lawton, Oklahoma, which in the ‘80s was the 3rd largest city in the state with a population near 100,000. For the past twenty years, I’ve lived in Wichita Falls, Texas, similar in size at around 105,000 people and (last time I checked) is the 37th largest city in Texas. As much as I enjoy living in Texas, I will say I don’t really find any of the major cities to be very charming. The opposite is true of Oklahoma. In fact, Tulsa would be the first (TX/OK) city I would choose to live in.

  • @CurtisThomas-x3y
    @CurtisThomas-x3y Год назад +72

    As an Okie, I’m quite satisfied that we’re not overpopulated, as it keeps it nice.

    • @BullseyeBenR
      @BullseyeBenR 3 месяца назад

      Yeah i like that every country pretty much votes red. As opposed to Texas 🤦‍♂️😂

    • @BillyBulletPewPew
      @BillyBulletPewPew 3 месяца назад +1

      @CurtisThomas-x3y i agree brother.

    • @bleepblo
      @bleepblo 3 месяца назад

      @@BullseyeBenR country? Lol

    • @russellchevalier3606
      @russellchevalier3606 21 день назад

      @@CurtisThomas-x3y myself as well! Not many neighborhoods in Texas like the one I live in where lots are 3-5 acres. My son lives 30’ish miles outside Fort Worth and his spacious lot is one acre vs my 4 1/2. Both homes a bit over 2000 sq fr. Mine appraises at 320k and is at 575k. My property taxes under 2K and his is just over 10K. Oklahoma is OK.

  • @danlayne9436
    @danlayne9436 Год назад +16

    As an Okie, all I have to say is that one just needs to drive through it to see why so few live here. Outside of the local college sports team named after land thieves, this state really has nothing going for it. Tornadoes, ice storms, flooding, and, somehow, earthquakes. We're near the bottom of every Quality of Life metric imaginable.
    Why do I live here? My parents retired to here and I wanted my kids to know them before they pass. And, it is relatively inexpensive to live here.

    • @tflick41
      @tflick41 Год назад

      FYI, you may live here but you are no "Okie"! "college sports team named after land thieves" You sound like a liberal pissed off because you're surrounded on all sides. Feel free to depart anytime.

    • @yungneen6967
      @yungneen6967 5 месяцев назад +4

      What are you talking about, we have super low sales tax, low state income tax, there’s so much history, 6 different biomes, so many national parks, if you don’t like the politics of your area guarantee you can find a liberal area in Tulsa or Oklahoma City, we made killing babies illegal last year, we have WIC, which allows single mothers to have access to free information, formula, and some childcare. You have no idea what you’re talking about

    • @Fiftynine414
      @Fiftynine414 5 месяцев назад

      @@yungneen6967 Amen!!

  • @roksho1
    @roksho1 Год назад

    At timestamp 8:11 you show a map listing Austin as being on the Gulf coast. I think you meant HOUSTON, Austin is a few hours inland from Houston, toward the center of Texas.

  • @kurtshirvinski836
    @kurtshirvinski836 5 месяцев назад +1

    As an Oklahoman, don't come here unless you want to live our lifestyle or you will be ostracized. We're pretty laid back and accepting but when someone tries to change our ways of life, we will make their life a living hell in the most passive aggressive ways possible

  • @tornadokegan
    @tornadokegan Год назад +19

    The People that claim Oklahoma has nothing but farm fields Have never seen eastern Oklahoma also regarding Dallas Fort Worth Oklahomas population will likely change within 10 to 20 years given current trends there’s already new construction going up in between I 35 and US 75 up to and around US 70

    • @BruceLeeRoy26
      @BruceLeeRoy26 Год назад +2

      Well I’ve moved from South Florida to Oklahoma and I can confirm that Oklahoma still doesn’t have much. There might be a slightly prettier eastern Oklahoma versus the rest of the state but it’s still underwhelming versus its Arkansas counterpart in which it draws its ecosystem from. That’s kind of how Oklahoma is, it borrows some features from its neighboring state but it’s like a duller version.

    • @EvelynElaineSmith
      @EvelynElaineSmith 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, the DFW Metroplex is growing North into Oklahoma. Denton already seems to be part of the Metroplex.

    • @ef5hunter
      @ef5hunter 4 месяца назад

      Let me tell you my friends, its not just Eastern Oklahoma that has pretty places. I can show you lots of beauty in Western Oklahoma. Anybody ever heard of the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge in Southwestern Oklahoma?

  • @trinitysalvationministries2168
    @trinitysalvationministries2168 Год назад +16

    Great coverage of Oklahoma! I was born here in the 1960's and still have no desire to live anywhere else. This state has more Native Americans and different tribes than any other state. Overall Oklahoma is very Christian oriented. A co-worker of mine moved here from NJ and when he was staying here for the job interview, he was unsure until he and his wife went grocery shopping. They were shocked when people would walk by smiling at them and tell them to have a great day. It's a very friendly place. The traffic is much less congested, and the cost of living is hard to beat. I know of many families moving here from California where they lived in a 2-bedroom 1 bath house that sold for $900k or even much more, and here for $300k you can buy a beautiful 3 or 4 bed home with all the amenities and have enough money left over to pay all their debts off. I have noticed that in the last 5 years with liberal policies driving away people from CA and NY, many more cars are on the road and housing additions are being built. Hopefully these new Oklahoman's will leave the "hustle and bustle" attitude behind and learn to be happy.

    • @d.r.1091
      @d.r.1091 Год назад +10

      Shhhh. Don't talk this state up that much. Many of these people bring their liberal politics with them. Lets just keep this a secret so they'll go somewhere else

    • @EvelynElaineSmith
      @EvelynElaineSmith Год назад +3

      The best compliment I perhaps ever received as a native Texas was from a Native American student in Idaho, who had also attended college in Oklahoma. She said she really liked me because I was just like her profs in Oklahoma. Texas & Oklahoma culture is very similar.

    • @clwest3538
      @clwest3538 Год назад +5

      Regrettably 'some' of those CA and NY imports (OKC and Tulsa areas) are bringing their 'liberal' attitudes and votes with them ... why run away from someplace and then vote to make your 'new' place just like the old? As we say here, "... just don't make sense ...".

  • @kradwonders
    @kradwonders Год назад +11

    I had family members who moved to Oklahoma and the first question asked when they met new people was “what church do you go to?”. They found out very quickly that if the answer did not fit the questionnaire idea they got shunned. After a few years of this they moved out even though they had good jobs, peace of mind was more important. The religious attitude drove them out. My family members are Christian just not the type of ultra-conservative that most of Oklahoma is.

    • @notmarr2000
      @notmarr2000 Год назад +7

      We have plenty of atheists and people of other faiths here as well. Unfortunately, many evangelical Christians and also conservatives feel privileged and entitled as the majority group and express the view that "their beliefs are the true Oklahoman beliefs". They have little tolerance for dissenting views. Too bad, this is still the United States. Fortunately, most people are still friendly and decent here.

    • @kingtachalla6181
      @kingtachalla6181 Год назад +10

      You're overreacting it's literally not like that at all lmao quit making it seem like it's way worse then it really is

    • @kingtachalla6181
      @kingtachalla6181 Год назад +4

      ​@@notmarr2000I mean honestly true Oklahoma beliefs belong to the native ppl or what's left of us

    • @d.r.1091
      @d.r.1091 Год назад +8

      That's funny. I'm 57 and lived here all my life. Haven't attended church sine the early 90's. Never once have I been asked that question and I don't live in the city

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад

      Meaning nominal?

  • @davidguza1032
    @davidguza1032 Год назад +1

    My father was born in Krebs OK when it was still Indian territory and he was always proud of that. Oklahoma ans have a lot to be proud of....their football team, the famous musical and Merle haggard "Okie from Muskogee," to mention a few. There is a lot of ethnic diversity as well...native American but also some of it stemming from European Immigration in the early 1900's. My father's family came over from Czechoslovakia and were brought to ports in Texas and many Europeans settled in OKlahoma....there remains contingents of European descendants who are proud of their European descent in Ok. It is OK to be proud of your Ok. history!

  • @johnnymarty9583
    @johnnymarty9583 6 месяцев назад +4

    Oklahoma is also being flooded by people from California AND Texas! Literally, the 2 main out-of-state license plates I see almost daily! 😂

    • @keinyoda
      @keinyoda 4 месяца назад

      I recently moved to Western Oklahoma from West Virginia

  • @BW12149
    @BW12149 Год назад +15

    I’ve lived in Tulsa Oklahoma since 1978. I have lived in Texas, New York, Nebraska and Missouri. My family is from the southeast area of Oklahoma, Arkansas and Texas. My maternal great grandfather was a U.S. Deputy Marshal working out of Fort Smith, Arkansas for federal judge Isaac Parker. His area was Indian territory ( later the state of Oklahoma). He was well known for his exploits. His father was a Baptist minister who served the Native American Indian tribes and dedicated his life to them.
    My fathers family came from the same area, as did my mother. Many of the men worked in the coal mines, and both grandfathers served in WW1 and 2. My dad was a military man, serving in WW2 and Korea. After my time in the Air Force, I moved around quite a bit but decided to return to Oklahoma but I didn’t want to live in the southeast area because jobs were scarce.
    The Tulsa metropolitan area has approximately one million residents. I continued my fire department career from 1980-2017, finally retiring in 2017.
    Oklahoma is a very nice place to live. The weather can be unusual at times, and we have the same problems with politicians😅 that other states have. But it’s an amazing place as the 11 counties around Tulsa are known as Green Country. Southeast is very hilly, and the far western Oklahoma is flat and somewhat desert like. Oklahoma City has grown immensely along with Tulsa. There’s a lot of history here along with low cost of living, low taxes, ease of traveling due to major interstate highways throughout the state and two major airports.
    This is my home and we truly enjoy the area. My brother lives in Oklahoma City and my younger sister about 30 miles from me. Tulsa has many parks, walking paths, museums, and various entertainment acts that come through. It’s a very lively city with superb police, sheriff office and fire/EMS, plus great hospitals, medical providers, clinics.

    • @ellamcculloch4570
      @ellamcculloch4570 7 месяцев назад +1

      Because of tornados

    • @BW12149
      @BW12149 7 месяцев назад

      @@ellamcculloch4570 it seems multiple states are having a lot more tornadoes this year already, so they aren’t the reason for someone not wanting to live here. Tulsa is in a unique area and doesn’t experience tornados as much as Oklahoma City area and points southwest and south of here.

    • @richardgillin3024
      @richardgillin3024 7 месяцев назад +1

      My mother and and father are both from Oklahoma, and my mother’s father was a farmer and moved to Eureka California and my father grew up in Blythe California. 30 years ago I moved here and coming from L.A people thought I was crazy! Now most of those people live here now. We do not to be more popular, life in Oklahoma is living the American dream. Peace be with you.

    • @DesiraeTackett
      @DesiraeTackett 7 месяцев назад

      Well put

  • @jaredbills72
    @jaredbills72 Год назад +5

    I grew up in SE OK. Although there are mointains (really they are large hills in that region) most raise cattle rather than poultry. They may even do both but rarely have i seen somone with only poultry farms.
    I think more people live in texas because there are more jobs available and there is no state tax. For a while, the beer in texas had higher alcohol content and tasted better prior to 2016 or 2017 when oklahoma changed its regulations on that.
    Oklahoma does have more relaxed Marijuana THC laws. A small town of 2500 people can have as many dispensaries as it does coffee shops.
    Oklahoma is slower paced in the rural areas. The cities like OKC and tulsa are faster and similar to dallas.
    Casinos in oklahoma are interesting. Most are owned by a native american tribe (choctaw, creek, cherokee, etc) and many people from bordering states enter oklahoma to gamble especially if they are 18-20 because bordering states have an age minimum on gambling usually stating people must be 21 or older to enter a casino. In texas gambling is illegal which is why many in the DFW and north texas area go to thackerville or durant to roll the dice.
    They strategically placed these casinos near the border to bring in guests from those nearby states. The little town of pacola also has a large casino very close to the arkansas border as you approach Fort Smith.

  • @JasonNichols75
    @JasonNichols75 Год назад +6

    I'm always afraid of putting my foot in my mouth due to a technicality I'm not aware of. But, as an Oklahoman (and a Native America, though not Osage), I've never heard "Osage" pronounced O-SAHG-EH. It's always OH-SAGE.
    Same applies to Ouchita. I was taught (and have always heard) WASH-IT-TAH, not OH-CHE-TAH. However, that word is sorta strange and lots of people get that one wrong.

    • @EvelynElaineSmith
      @EvelynElaineSmith 11 месяцев назад

      Yes, almost everyone in North Texas, Arkansas, & Oklahoma winces when they hear mispronounced proper nouns like Osage & Ouachita. Similarly, Texans start yelling at their computer screens when they hear the mispronunciations of places like Waxahachie & Mexia. While some of these mispronounced Texas place names are from Native tribes others are Spanish or German place names.

  • @KyleElrod
    @KyleElrod Месяц назад

    Very informative video. Only note I have is the mention of the Oklahoma River. The North Canadian is the river that runs through the heart of Oklahoma City. The river was recently developed to be a home for water sports like competitive rowing and similar activities and the city decided to rename the short section of the Canadian River the Oklahoma River for some reason. The city isn't very original on its naming conventions. The Oklahoma River is on Oklahoma Blvd. in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma.

  • @samwilliams1142
    @samwilliams1142 Год назад +1

    I have lived west of I-35 and east of I-35. There are noticeably more people east of I-35. And more rainfall east of I-35.

  • @cutlassrkt
    @cutlassrkt Год назад +4

    DFW has a population of 7.6 million. Dallas has a population of 1.28 million. A lot of people group that area into Dallas. Dallas is big and from some parts of fort Worth are an hour away from Dallas.

  • @dylantwists
    @dylantwists Год назад +8

    11:15 Oklahoma has a port to the east of Tulsa, the Port of Catoosa. You can ship down the Mississippi river from this port

  • @WinkTartanBelle
    @WinkTartanBelle Год назад +5

    Texas also had large deep ports. Lacking these ports, and without any dependably navigable deep rivers (at the time), Oklahoma struggled with access for the flow of both inbound and outbound trade. Never underestimate the importance of sea ports.

    • @ruthbowers7589
      @ruthbowers7589 7 месяцев назад

      Texas actually has shallow bays and shallow rivers/bayous. They had to dig them deeper to make them navigable. The natural channels behind the Houston ship channel and the intercostal waterway both had to be significantly widened and deepened. During colonial times, Texas was not very accessible by sea. A road was built up from Mexico City centuries ago to get people to Texas.

  • @peggyvorse1461
    @peggyvorse1461 8 дней назад

    I live in Oklahoma a small place called Noble Oklahoma. When I moved here in 2019. It wasn’t as crowded then but I moved here from Texas kicking and screaming. My youngest daughter brought me here., and there was not that many people living here than even the outskirts of Norman next to Noble it’s not getting all kinds of restaurants and stuff up and down the main road, I came from Texas in the Houston area Pasadena, Texas and I liked it better, but I’m sure if I was still living there I wouldn’t like it anymore, The rule area that I’m living in and I go to Noble to go to my church. They’re starting to build more homes next to my church. It was open the land on one side of it for miles of around.

  • @matthewjuenger2384
    @matthewjuenger2384 3 месяца назад

    Thank you brother. I appreciate you.

  • @Stormy01
    @Stormy01 Год назад +13

    When he means Dallas, he’s not talking about Dallas Texas, the city. He’s talking about Dallas-Ft Worth Metroplex

    • @Damianoutlaw
      @Damianoutlaw Год назад +2

      Ft Worth isn’t as significant as Dallas. There are plenty of other metro areas in the United States with a principal city and it’s smaller ones such as St Paul, FT Lauderdale, Long Beach….etc.
      Most people don’t feel like saying all those cities so they just name the principal city such as Miami, Dallas, Los Angeles…..etc

    • @csh000
      @csh000 6 месяцев назад

      With a population almost equal to Austin; Fort Worth is very significant. Many people would be surprised to know the Dallas population is smaller than San Antonio and will likely fall below Austin too. While it is a big city, Dallas is quite small in comparison to its metroplex. Which is not the situation for San Antonio, Houston or Austin.

    • @Stormy01
      @Stormy01 6 месяцев назад

      @@csh000 Dallas isnt getting smaller, at least not as rapid as you're making seem, and just because Ft Worth and Austin are comparable in size doesn't mean that either of them will pass Dallas, population changes all the damn time

  • @classic.cameras
    @classic.cameras Год назад +51

    I heard "Texas is so big you can fit the entire USA, the moon and another Texas into Texas."
    So clearly Texas didn't need that panhandle and was generous to Oklahoma.

    • @karlrambo2987
      @karlrambo2987 Год назад

      As the video says, it wasn’t gift, it was a scheme to continue slavery.

    • @bearpawz_
      @bearpawz_ Год назад +7

      My dad ( a proud Texan) visited me where I'm living right now, up in Anchorage & when I picked him up at the airport... he was wearing a tee-shirt that was bragging about the size of Texas.. A couple weeks after he went home, I found a tee-shirt that showed two states of Texas inside an outline of the state of Alaska that said "Take that Texas!" and I mailed it to him... 😆 He got a major kick out of it, but I doubt he's ever worn it... (Maybe he has.. but somehow I doubt it) 🤣

    • @6770chiefs
      @6770chiefs Год назад

      Texas gave up the panhandle so they could keep slaves, nor a good play on their part.

    • @ryeboirox
      @ryeboirox Год назад

      Texas thought keeping slavery was more important than land

    • @100percentSNAFU
      @100percentSNAFU Год назад +2

      I think the big computer was wrong when it took a billion years to come up with the answer to "What is the meaning of life, the universe, and everything?". She answered "42". The real answer is clearly "Texas" 😂😂😂

  • @fjp3305
    @fjp3305 Год назад +6

    Very interesting video, learned things I didn't know.

  • @tobymccollum2198
    @tobymccollum2198 3 месяца назад +1

    As a representative from Oklahoma, it is my duty to inform that this much information getting out is compromising our lowlaying ability

  • @joedapro7236
    @joedapro7236 Год назад

    Adding to your comment about the Oil companies being located in Texas. Many fellow commentators
    have pointed out that many of those companies were originally in Oklahoma! Halliburton was also
    located in Oklahoma, Duncan to be exact for many, many years, before moving to Texas!