News Clip5:00
Curated Video

COVID Is Putting Serious Strain On Oklahoma Hospitals

Higher Ed
Hospitals in Oklahoma recently warned residents that COVID has reduced their ability to care for all but emergency medical cases.
News Clip3:27
Curated Video

Dems Highlight Garland's OKC Bombing Work

Higher Ed
United States Senators and several attorneys involved with the Oklahoma City bombing trial gathered in front of the Supreme Court Tuesday to urge the Senate to consider a Supreme Court confirmation hearing for Merrick Garland.Garland was...
News Clip1:59
Curated Video

Trump Administration Rejects Stricter Emissions Controls Amid Pandemic

Higher Ed
The Environmental Protection Agency won't add stricter industrial pollution measures to curtail airborne particles seen as damaging to lungs.
News Clip7:14
Curated Video

Quapaw Nation Aims To Clean Up One Oklahoma Town

Higher Ed
The Quapaw Nation in Oklahoma are hoping that with renewed sovereignty they can rehab and clean up some of the land within their reservation.
News Clip2:21
Curated Video

A botched Oklahoma execution in which the state was using a new drug combination for the first time intensifies the debate over how states handle lethal injections. (April 30)

Higher Ed
A death row inmate writhed, clenched his teeth and appeared to struggle against the restraints holding him to a gurney before Oklahoma prison officials halted an execution in which the state was using a new drug combination for the first...
News Clip3:21
Curated Video

Winter Storm Packing Snow, Freezing Rain Moves Across U.S.

Higher Ed
Airlines canceled more than 1,000 flights in the U.S. scheduled for Wednesday, according to the flight-tracking service FlightAware.com.
News Clip3:27
Curated Video

Johnson & Johnson Found Guilty In Oklahoma Opioid Suit

Higher Ed
A judge ruled Johnson & Johnson was responsible for creating a public nuisance and fueling Oklahoma's opioid epidemic.
News Clip4:00
Curated Video

Ukrainians In Oklahoma Pray For Their Families, Peace In Their Home

Higher Ed
Many Ukrainians immigrated to Oklahoma in 1901, and now people there worry for their families in their war-stricken home land.
News Clip3:10
Curated Video

The Reality Of Abortion Today

Higher Ed
The Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe is having a major impact, by allowing states to outlaw abortions and raising new questions.
News Clip3:27
Bloomberg

Continental Resources' New Shale Play in Oklahoma

Higher Ed
Nov.29 -- The IEA has said that if OPEC cuts production in the U.S., shale producers will race to put rigs to work and flood the market with more oil. A lot of that oil will come from the well-known Permian Basin in Texas, but some of it...
News Clip2:23
Curated Video

Native Woman Shares Unique Struggles In OK Community Post-Abortion Ban

Higher Ed
A Choctaw citizen living in Oklahoma says the state's abortion ban is disproportionately affecting her community.
News Clip2:41
Curated Video

Supreme Court Finds Much Of Oklahoma Is Native American Land

Higher Ed
In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled Oklahoma land reserved for the Creek Nation remains "Indian country."
News Clip3:05
Sky News

Sky News follows the story Death Row Prisoner Richard Glossip

Higher Ed
VOICED: Sky News follows the story of death row prison inmate Richard Glossip who received a stay of execution in January, 2015. Richard Glossip is scheduled for execution on 16th September, 2015. Shows friends and family of Richard...
News Clip0:08
Curated Video

Quapaw Nation Aims To Clean Up Polluted Oklahoma Town

Higher Ed
Decades of unrestricted mining left piles of toxic metal, cave-in risks, contaminated groundwater and more in Picher, Oklahoma.
News Clip2:43
Curated Video

Fake Emails, Robocalls And Texts Target Voters Ahead Of Election Day

Higher Ed
Experts say disinformation through texts and emails, as opposed to social media, feels more personalized and could do more damage.
News Clip1:35
Curated Video

Lawmakers Criticize President Trump For Holding Rally On Juneteenth

Higher Ed
Democratic Rep. Al Green said holding a rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 19 "is more than a slap in the face to African Americans."
News Clip5:12
Bloomberg

Energy Recovery Brings Silicon Valley Tech to Fracking

Higher Ed
Sept. 7 -- Joel Gay, president and chief executive officer at Energy Recovery, discusses new, disruptive technologies for the fracking industry and being positioned to take advantage of oil market shocks. He speaks on "Bloomberg Markets."
News Clip2:35
Curated Video

Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama Warned As Severe Weather Approaches

Higher Ed
The affected areas, including the cities of Baton Rouge and Jackson, Mississippi, could see strong tornadoes, forecasters said.
News Clip1:55
Curated Video

Washington State Sues Johnson & Johnson Over Opioid Epidemic

Higher Ed
Washington alleges the company used deceptive marketing practices to promote the use of opioids and downplayed the risk of addiction.
News Clip3:02
Curated Video

Families Affected By Gun Violence Testify Before House Committee

Higher Ed
The House Committee on Oversight and Reform is hearing from victims and victims' family members who suffered from recent mass shootings.
News Clip3:40
Curated Video

Fort Smith Imparts The History Of The Five Tribes' Treacherous Journey

Higher Ed
Fort Smith National Historic Site was the Five Tribes' final stop before what's now Oklahoma, but some groups are erasing its history from schools.
News Clip2:04
Sky News

Attorney Mark Henricksen Calls Death Penalty in Oklahoma "Bad Luck Lottery"

Higher Ed
CLEAN: Richard Glossip's attorney, Mark Henricksen speaking at anti-death penalty press conference, calling the death penalty in Oklahoma "a bad luck lottery". Sky News follows the story of death row prison inmate Richard Glossip.
News Clip1:13
Curated Video

462 Oklahoma Inmates Freed In The Largest Commutation In U.S. History

Higher Ed
The Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board voted unanimously to commute the sentences of hundreds of nonviolent offenders.
News Clip3:51
Curated Video

Race Panel Member Hopeful 50 Years After Riots

Higher Ed
The last surviving member of the Kerner Commission says he remains haunted that the panel's recommendations on U.S. race relations and poverty were never adopted. But nearly 50 years later, former U.S. Sen. Fred Harris of...