Tulsa, Oklahoma: The GOOD and the BAD
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- Опубліковано 25 гру 2024
- What's going on in downtown Tulsa?
For this video I drove the downtown region in the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma’s biggest city. The goal would be to show both the downtown area as well as the surrounding region. It was a really pretty day in late fall, the day after Thanksgiving, with highs in the low 50s. The day was Friday, November 27, 2020 at noon.
Tulsa is the second largest city in Oklahoma, with a population of about 400,000 people, putting it around the same size of cities such as Tampa and Minneapolis.
The state of Oklahoma is known for four main things - oil, religion and Native Americans. Oil was first discovered here in 1901 and by 1920 this city’s population swelled from 1,000 people to 75,000 people. Hence, it named itself the oil capital of the world. Today, Tulsa’s oil influence has diminished, but it still ranks as the nation’s 4th highest oil producer. Many oil fields dot the landscape just outside of town.
Oklahoma as a state ranks as the 8th most religious, where more than 70% of folks say believe in God with absolute certainty. As a city, Tulsa ranks as the 17th most religious in the nation. Hence, that’s a big reason why Oklahoma always votes conservative. The last time Oklahomans voted for a democratic presidential candidate was in 1964 for Lyndon B Johnson.
Recently, the Supreme Court ruled that . The Tulsa metro area ranks first by a long shot for the percentage of residents who are Native American - at 14%. And the Supreme Court just ruled that half of Oklahoma should now be considered Native American land, including much of the city of Tulsa.
BBQ is a big deal here. Tulsa says it lies at the midpoint between pig country and cow country - or the border between the south and the west. The city is widely known for its wood smoked barbecue flavor, particularly for its hickory smoked meat.
Tulsa’s crime rate is far above the national average for a city of its size. Most of the worst crime takes place in the poorer areas on the city’s north end. Tulsa is extremely affordable for homes - it ranks as the 6th cheapest major US city for home prices, where the average home costs about $194,000. And home prices are going up quickly here - . People are suddenly coming to Tulsa from other metro areas in large numbers to take advantage of this city’s low cost of living and large homes with big lots. It’s been called one of the nation’s best most affordable cities.
Here’s downtown Tulsa.
#tulsa #oklahoma
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The best video on this topic!
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Fun fact: drive between 22 - 24 miles per hour and you'll hit every green light in Downtown Tulsa.
Every time
@@ephraimprestley640 one of the first lessons my dad taught me when I first started driving
We moved here not long ago and someone told us about this but forgot the speed LOL, thank you!
@@Alex-ss4bk not a problem 😊
Eso me pasa también, cuando salgo a manejar, cierto,,,
Nick: This is Tulsa
Actual Tour he takes: less than 2% of the city
@Jay Rufus their is so much more to see. However if he had shown All of Tulsa, it would be a two-four hour video.
@@JohnDiDough not truest
@@JohnDiDough That's just a small portion that was shown. Visit North Tulsa, Southwest, Greenwood Archer Pine..GAP..(GAP Band is named after most of members are from Tulsa) area was driving by in a blink....
Home prices are affordable. That's about the only thing you got right in this whole video.
I lived a good part of my life in Tulsa. It’s probably not what a lot of people would think of as an exciting place, but it’s not at all what this film depicts. Looks like it was done on a sleepy Sunday afternoon, avoiding the places where there might be a lot of people. And showing vacant buildings and lots. The city is much more than what’s depicted here.
I’ve lived here my entire life except for law school and I 100% agree!
You're right, I live in Tulsa and the only thing I could appreciate was a ghost town. Tulsa has life. Even though he told us it was a holiday.
Yes!
this was filmed in the height of the pandemic and when we were all essentially staying home on lockdown.
Looks depressing AF :(
Spent the last year of my life there thanks to the Tulsa Remote program, and it was certainly one of the best years of my life-some of the kindest souls (like Boise/Flagstaff nice) that I have been blessed to meet!
Thank you
I've heard good things about that program and was telling my grandchildren about it.
Would you say it was safe enough for your little sister?
Of course it's a safe town it really is there a bad spots in every two on the whole planet. Tulsa is truly safe town. the media just makes it seem like it's not there were no devastating riots here cuz there's good people here.
Where were the kind souls? I live in Tulsa and most people here are snobbish rude jerks.
The day after Thanksgiving during Covid, and you wonder where everyone's at? Plus, you covered approximately 1 square mile on your "tour".
Exactly
And hardly anyone was working at that time.
He should have toured 71st & 169 that day!
@@chrisgritzmacher8082 Bro! The number of Homeless currently living behind Lowe's is alarming! Walked up on a homeless dude smoking meth and his dog 🐕 nearly got punched 👊 in the snout for coming at me tail straight and growling. Crazy 💩 going here in Tulsa.
@@DawsonTyson Which Lowes?
Lived in Tulsa through the 80's & 90's...loved it!
Moved to Tulsa from Austin two years ago.
I love your video because you make Tulsa seem dull. I don’t want what happened to Austin to happen to Tulsa.
Truth is, the City is outstanding. Cheap, Good Weather, Aesthetically beautiful with Tons of Trees, Rolling Hills, A Major River, excellent biking trails, World Class Art museums in Philbrook and Gilcrease and the best park in the World. ‘The Gathering Place’. You think I’m lying, you’ll be shocked. I called bullshit until I saw for myself, the park is awe inspiring…They also have a killer baseball team with one of the coolest views of a Cities downtown I’ve seen. Tulsa is also more Liberal than OKC, which the 2021 version of Liberalism is insane sounds bad but maybe more Libertarian I’d say than hard Conservative. The Conservatives I see are just normal people. There is no ‘Drama’ or Unrest here that a good portion of the US is seeing. However, I wouldn’t burn any American flags here. You’ll likely get a courtesy nap from an America loving Okie. Which you’d deserve.
They also have lots of Lakes surrounding the City, so if you like water you’re in luck.
It also has a Rich Music History with Bob Wills, Leon McAuliffe, JJ Cale, Leon Russel, Lee Hazlewood, and a ton of historic shows brought to town by Little Wing Productions from the Sex Pistols in 1978 at The Police, Iggy Popp, Richard Hell, The Police, U2, Van Halen, Black Sabbath , Frank Sinatra and Willie Nelson’s 1977 4th of July Picnic…Cains Ballroom, Brady Theater, Tulsa Pavilion, Tulsa Assembly Center and on.
The Woody Guthrie Center, OKPOP, World HQ for BMX, Booming Downtown and one of the best live music scenes in America. The local musicians are world class. Texans and Okies probably have more music history than the rest of the US.
The City is growing and the combined metro has right at 1,100,000 people. OKC is at 1,400,000 and is it’s own City, absolutely nothing like Tulsa. More like Fort Worth. Which is ok 👍
According to the Supreme Court OKC is in Oklahoma and Tulsa is now in ‘Indian Territory’ again. Sounds good to me.
Tulsa is also on the short list for an NFL expansion team. Why? Because draw a 150 mile circle around OKC and you have OKC, Tulsa, and Stillwater: Roughly 2,560,000 prospective fans.
Draw a 150 mile circle around Tulsa and you have : 3,975,000 Prospective fans and Huge Businesses like WalMart, Tyson, Quiktrip, American Airlines, Cessna, Hawker-Beechcraft to attain revenue from.
Tulsa-1,100,000
OKC-1,400,000
Wichita- 650,000
Fayetteville/Bentonville/Rogers, AR-575,00
Joplin/Springfield, MO-200,000
Stillwater, OK-60,000
Tulsa is a special City, Elon Musk nearly moved his Company here over Austin. Tulsa will continue to attract Business Relocation, with one I won’t mention as it’s not been announced yet but it’s impressive.
My family of 7 came two years ago, and won’t be leaving for many decades if at all….
Thank you for this awesome comment!!
When I saw the gathering place for the first time I didn't believe it, Lol
I am more than okay with people making Oklahoma seem dull. Let the crazies be attracted to elsewhere, I don't care where, just not here.
Clint are you a realtor? Great facts and knowledge. 😀
I avoid Tulsa but the last several times I was required to be there, downtown was still as empty as ever to the point that it was creepy.
I moved to Tulsa in 1951. I loved the downtown area. We rode the Sand Springs streetcar to Main street and shopped Kresses, Walgreens and lots m
ore shops. It was alive with movie theaters, businesses and people.
My grandparents raised their kids on Virgin Street. Well the part that is now TIA. My aunts attended Hamilton Elementary until they moved to Owasso in the early 1960’s. My grandfather worked for Sinclair Oil for ten years before he took a job at the MD bomber plant in the late 50’s.
The day after Thanksgiving, would mean that most or nearly all of the shopping and other commerical traffic will not be downtown Tulsa during the day time, as it is BLACK FRIDAY.
Most of the crime isn’t on the North Side anymore Nick. Tulsa is changing very fast. I’ve lived on every side and if I had to pick a most dangerous side it would be the drug infested south west. The city as a whole though is pretty nice and safe 💯
Also the east side is way worst then north Tulsa.
That’s a fact
Is there a lot of gang activity?
@@stinkypete891 I wouldn’t say gang activity but mild crime. I’ve been here all my life and Tulsa is like a lot of the other places if you don’t put yourself in base situations any part of town is safe lol.
Gotta agree. Especially the south side past 31st and Memorial and West past Gilcrease Museum Road. TweakerVille.
2:15 that’s the Brady theater 🎭 I opened up for Buckcherry there in 2015. That building is literally 100 plus years old in age. Tulsa has grown a lot due to the art district and better managed building owners. Many jobs are available here. Californians and Texans move here constantly.
For the record when you ask “where is everyone?”
I don’t know what you expected in 2020 but that wasn’t a great time to catch the vibrant energy or collective gatherings.
What RK (9) says is true. : ) Covid had an effect here, like everywhere. Ryan is one of many of our great local musicians I mentioned in my comment.
Californians moving to Tulsa ? Can't imagine them moving to one of the most conservative states in the country
@@robson2939 Trust me it’s changing. I like a little bit of change but these older folks don’t lol however.
@@robson2939 It's a lot cheaper and a lot of people return to areas like it. Sell home in California and buy in Oklahoma they have lots of money left.
He also said it was the Friday after Thanksgiving so in addition to Covid most people were off work and everything was closed.
There are about 3 of these restaurant shopping districts that are walkable, Utica Square, Cherry Street, and Peoria St...Tulsa has some areas in the Downtown area on the Northside with bars and restaurants, he probably drove in the wrong areas...Tulsa isn't known as tourist friendly there are lot of hideaway places that only locals no about...
Well after Biden's debacle no place will be safe. Cheers 50 countries pouring their prisons into usa. I d suggest calling your representatives and senators!.
LOL Brookside is not safe anymore. That was the 70s! Now it’s all public housing and crack housed.
This video makes it look like there is nothing there but a handful of big buildings and a lot of parking lots.
do share examples of hideaways. my cousin and I are non-natives but we are certainly not stereotypical tourists
Native small town Texan and I’ve been living in Tulsa for two and a half years. I love this city!!
So much more going on downtown now, at least there is when I drive through it. Between the BOK Center, the new ballpark, Guthrie Green, the Greenwood District, Cain's Ballroom, restaurants, bars, and a thriving music scene, it's pretty vibrant. The Art Deco architecture and murals make it beautiful, too. Outside of downtown, there's Gathering Place, Cherry Street, Woodward Park, Brookside, museums, and beautiful oil-era mansions. So much more than you can tell from this video.
Good to hear!
Tulsa native here. Its the best place to live. I will never move away. This video only showed downtown area which is okay! But, the city has a TON more to offer. One of the fastest growing in the nation. Fun place to be.
Lmao are you kidding, Tulsa is a joke
filmed the day after thanksgiving so yeah downtown was empty
Born and raised in tulsa. We have nothing here. Cost of living is great though
@@--.---......-- who is this we you speak of? LOL
@@SethDavidson68 we the people of tulsa
Dude! Do you even research the cities you visit? You drove around “downtown” but were not on Main Street, Boston Avenue, or Reconciliation Way.
Lazy video about Tulsa.
Do better.
Black Wall Street…hello
I am almost certain if he'd driven down Boston instead of Cincinnati there would have been something going on at Elote at the very least.
This was recorded during the covid shut down. Tulsa is very lively and can see thousands of people commuting in downtown. Also, it’s home to Greenwood, aka Black Wall Street the most violent massacre in U.S history took place . The BOK building is also, a smaller scale skyscraper to the twin towers of NYC design by the same architect. Downtown Tulsa is also home to the famous Cains ballroom. The BOK center is also the nation’s highest ticket selling venue. Center of the universe is also in D town Tulsa .the outsiders was also filmed in Tulsa. It’s late I’m going to bed hopefully this sheds some more light in our cities Downtown district
I live in Tulsa and it is a relatively decent place to live. Not nearly as much crime and drug as people say, although we do have some homeless issues. Downtown isn't usually that busy, even during the week. Most people only go there to work in office buildings. The lunch time crowd is decent and Saturday nights. All the action is usually on Utica and Cherry Street (15th street) during the week. Tulsa has expanded a lot in the Southern part of town, but I rarely go there. They probably have some decent shops and restaurants out that way. Since this was taken last year during the pandemic and the day after Thanksgiving, I am surprised there were any automobiles around. There definitely wouldn't be many people walking around downtown any time.
I've lived in tulsa for 22 years and the crime and drug issue really is a big thing so idk where ur drawing that conclusion.
@@gallick0060 exactly! He’s never been to north Tulsa either. My dad was robbed and killed in Tulsa at his business in 1988.
Most downtowns in America are on the empty side dull side. It’s usually the northern cities like New York, Philly, Boston, Chicago and maybe a few more that have busy downtowns. America usually does not do downtowns well since many cities have gone downhill. The best downtowns in my opinion are in the European and Asian cities
I spent some time in Tulsa in the early 80s and really liked it. People were really nice. I would like to visit again some day. Thanks for sharing, Nick.
I love the song Donna the 80s were great sometimes I cry deep inside I wanne go back I love nostalgia
Not the same
Its gone down.
The early 80s.... Ohhh not a thing has changed since the early 80s.... J/J. You would be amazed at the growth since then. I was born in 79 and lived in Tulsa most every year since. I still think it's the prettiest bigger cities but I've been to definitely anywhere within 300 miles or so! I think it kind of be hard to find much of anything being the same as the early 80s. It would be fun to watch someone like You explore what 40 years has changed
@@ovienetz2158 ohhh, this makes me sad to hear, but honestly most towns have probably changed for the worse over the last thirty years. I doubt Tulsa stands alone in that regard.
It's not like it was in the 80s, Tulsa is like a dystopia at this point, I love love it here but I fucking hate it here man
If you're going to tour Downtown Tulsa, you really need to include ALL of the Arts District. Skipping Guthrie Green and Cain's Ballroom is just sad.
I am living in this city for the last two years now. I have loved every bit of living here. People are so nice and welcoming, values are important and hospitality is a part of life. These things seem to be vanishing from the advanced cities.
I live in Tulsa too!
Boy our city ghetto af wym lol
@@gallick0060 literally what i was abt to say💀
@@cherrylimeadee136 they must live in a different tulsa lmao
Any city that is lacking kindness, welcome, and hospitality is NOT ADVANCED.
I’m a Midwesterner who moved to Oklahoma for 8 years and let me tell you I’ve got stories.
@@michaelwhite2823 wow
@@michaelwhite2823 LOL same!
@@michaelwhite2823 One time I saw a meth addict juggle a few bags of chips in a Walmart at like 6 am on a weekday morning
Oklahoma isn't the south. Don't put this on southerners...lol
same! I'm originally from Michigan
I live in Tulsa and there are so many more beautiful street views you could have shown, than the ones you did. When I first started watching I was going to send it to friends and family to try to get them to come here, but there is blacktop in every city.
I’ve lived in Tulsa since 1978, 46 years now. Served on the fire department 1980-2005, and then the Broken Arrow Fire Dept 2005-2017. I don’t think there’s any other place I’d choose to live.
The day after Thanksgiving in 2020 thatd be why it's deserted and also we are in a pandemic. You have cherry street with eateries and Brookside with eat s ries and shopping and a 71st with a large mall plus several other strip malls on both sides of 71st along with tons of places to eat.
Tulsa Oklahoma is actually the geographical gateway to the west. The Center of the Universe actually is about two blocks south of the spot that claims to be it. The energy is incredible. Notice how clean it is.
@Summer D Yes I like Colorado, but Denver or others I wouldn’t call clean, or Pueblo. But they might be now. Are they?
@@ronniebishop2496 agreed
I lived in downtown Tulsa in the late 60's and early 70's. Totally different downtown! Didn't recognize much. What happened to the Cimarron Ballroom?
One thing not mentioned by other commenters and ignored by Nick is that Tulsa is being engulfed by turnpikes (toll roads). Coming into or leaving Tulsa is difficult without paying a toll on some turnpike. Not so in OKC, where both I35 and I40 are FREEways north south east and west. But then all the important state politicians work and/or live in OKC. My single biggest objection about Oklahoma is the state commits highway robbery by forcing people pay to use their roads. No other state has as many miles of turnpikes, per capita. And the people of Oklahoma don't seem to understand that they're being ripped off.
I lived in Tulsa for a short period of time while attending Spartan school of aeronautics and Technology. I lived on the north side and it wasn't terrible. N.side Tulsa is almost home to the former black wall street and the infamous 1921 Tulsa race massacre
The Greenwood District is downtown Tulsa, not up on the north side.
@@christinemcmahon-king9782 Greenwood is north of Admiral which is the dividing line between north and south. Greenwood runs from Archer to pine, thus the GAP band’s name from Greenwood, Archer and Pine.
I live in Tulsa and can attest to the fact that downtown is usually busier than this, but even under normal circumstances it's not the busiest part of town. That would be the area around Woodland Hills Mall near 71st and Memorial. I won't drive in that area unless it's completely unavoidable as the traffic is beyond ridiculous.
Yeah true, I live across the mall and traffic is insane on the weekends 😂
_Thanks for sharing another interesting dash board tour through the clean looking city of Tulsa Ok . The traffic denotes an early Sunday morning, during the pandemic quarantine. Best Wishes Sage n Nick_ 👍🇺🇲
I was wondering why there were so few people out and about!
Thank you for the tour of downtown Tulsa. It is my home and I loved that you paired my city with lively upbeat music.
If drive 27mph through downtown tulsa, you will hit a green light every time
Facts
That's definitely true on Cincinnati Ave, but not so much for the numbered streets.
Im so thankful for you Nick..You have been my light and Joy since the Pandemic a year ago..Your videos are so interesting to watch!!! Thankyou for saving my life !!!!
Thanks for this video, Nick. It was relaxing and informative.
Why so little people walk on the streets of USA smaller or medium size cities? 400k city and so little people walking, i saw this pattern repeating in many of Nick videos were streets are shown.
Public transit in and around Tulsa sucks. Most people commute to work downtown from different areas of Tulsa or the various surrounding cities. There's some condos and apartments downtown, but it doesn't seem like all that many people live there. The streets get packed when there's big concerts in town and for the occasional festival, but are quiet during work hours (unless it's lunchtime).
everybody has cars, were spoiled
It's in the description...filmed the day after thanksgiving...the other hateful assholes commenting couldn't bother to read that part before spewing their ridiculous vitriol.
I'm gonna put that blame mostly on Covid. This was shot the day before my birthday and the day after Thanksgiving. From what I remember we were all told we shouldn't even go meet up with our families out of concern we might be carrying the virus and pass it to a loved one who may not be strong enough to fight it and live. I live so close to the center of downtown I can walk there in 10 minutes. If I were to go right now and shoot a video driving the same route, there would be loads of people walking around.
Because people are LAZY. Easy answer.
I have been in Tulsa about 24 years and I'm originally from Syria " Dammascus " the oldest living city in the world and I have been in 29 Countries around the world 🌎 but Tulsa is one of the most beautiful cities ❤ very Clean easy to drive around people in tulsa the most friendly people ever and Tulsa very safe city and so affordable ❤ only things people very religious and Conservative but so cool people. Coming on and visit our beautiful City.
"only things people very religious and conservative" -- as if that's a bad thing? That's one of the BEST things about the area. It means good, caring, responsible, patriotic people.
Born and raised in Tulsa..my hometown ❤️❤️
Great video Nick.👍👍👍
Ok dr Leo
I see a lot of comments wondering why it looks like a ghost town. Im assuming Nick was there during business hours of a colder looking day. The only time downtown really has foot traffic is Saturday night in the blue dome district with good weather, during a big concert at the BOK, or lunch time during the week in the business district. Other than that, all the action happens on Brookside, Utica, Cherry Street or the suburbs where all of the money is. Tulsa is similar to Portland Oregon in the fact that the neighborhoods outside of downtown are where people like to hangout and eat - and the naturey areas like the arkansas river trails, gathering place, turkey mountain, lakes, etc. But yes, Tulsa’s downtown has never really been its strength.
Email me maybe you can do some Oklahoma Trivia! NickJohnsonNC18@gmail
I would disagree that downtown has never really been its strength. Up until the 1960’s downtown was the shopping hub of the city. It was packed during the day with shoppers and even the evening with theater goers as there were numerous movie theaters in and around downtown. It wasn’t until Southroads and Southland shopping centers were built that downtown started to become a less traveled area.
Same with down town Minneapolis and St Paul. No one is just chilling in down town during the day. Only like 4 college campuses downtown Minneapolis and not very social. Even less people out in down town St. Paul
In the video he says he was there on Black Friday, downtown is definitely a ghost town on black friday.
He did not go to the Art District or to Guthrie Green. Additionally, a lot of people were at Gathering Place on the day after Thanksgiving in 2020. That’s where I was.
I lived in T-town wish it it Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 1978 i.move from Los Angeles, California to Tulsa, Oklahoma. It was a cold day the day I arrived. I already have family before I came to Tulsa. At that time. Tulsa remains me of city of Compton, California back in the early fifty's and sistys. I enjoy my visit there. And I made up my mind that I was going to make tulsa, Oklahoma my home.
Love living in Tulsa. People aren't nearly as bad as bricks as other cities. Low cost of living. Not flat & red & dirty like OKC. Better BBQ than Austin.
(5:18) The brick building on the left is old Central High School. Now the building belongs to Public Service of Oklahoma.
When you Turn the corner at 2:15, Thats the Brady theater!!. I went to see Pantera there in 1996. Fantastic venue with a ton of history. Nice!!!!
🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 Appreciated, Nick. By the way, did you see more of the area? If so, will you share with your audience what it’s like?
@Love Laugh Live.. More dispensaries and homeless people on every corner than anything and I never known Tulsa for bbq....
@@Chris-qi5kn yeah. I don’t get the BBQ reference either. Nick didn’t do much, if any, research for this video.
@@tulsabeasley918 I would say Tulsa is known for BBQ but it is definitely unique. It's a mix of Texas BBQ and Kansas City BBQ. We also do BBQ Bologna which I found out was a Tulsa thing after living in a few other places. But I always found myself wishing I had some Tulsa BBQ.
Love Tulsa has four resorts in the immediate area including Hard Rock and Riverspirit. Tulsa is more of a family place with the best suburbs in the country. Bixby especially but BA , Jenks, Bristow. Are nice too.
We definitely have some great BBQ! He forgot fried onion burger and fried catfish.
Literally in Tulsa right now, been here for 2 weeks and the downtown footage is accurate
Lets see , i believe he said it was the day after Thanksgiving a holiday. I lived in Tulsa for 25 yrs really enjoyed it. Shalom
Going over that bridge at 3:00 reminded me of LA 6th St bridge.
So many American cities look so similar because they are so car-based.
Nick, Thank you😃 for sharing. Loved your info as well. Brigitte in Tulsa Oklahoma, as well.
From Tulsa and can honestly say I meet new people everyday and a lot of people from other states come here always
I travel a lot and when travel is done coming home always feels good like home 🏡
I'm sorry but as somebody who lives in tulsa, this video shows barely 2% of the city. He didn't even drive down Black Wall Street, it makes me wonder if he even researches his videos.
Keep in mind this was recorded the day after Thanksgiving. Pretty much a ghost town.
Happy Weekend Nick & Everyone Love 💘 😘 ❤ 💕 💙 💖 to All
I live in Tulsa. I 100% BELIEVE IN GOD! I use to work in the oil field industry (fracking), and I’m part Native. And I’m a firm believer in the right to own and openly carry weapons
Good Afternoon, Nick Johnson! 👍❤️
Tulsa seems very awkward and I find myself asking why?
Based on this video, I would agree. However, he didn’t actually show anything about Tulsa.
They are either at work. At home, at a restaurant or running an errand instead of aimlessly driving through the warehouse sector.
I was born and raised in Tulsa. Moved back recently and not too much has changed over the years. It is at least a growing and affordable place to live.
I like the overview gave. Thanks for the time and effort you put into your content!
Downtown Tulsa is more for night life like concerts and evening dining. Of course it’s gonna be very empty earlier in the day. If you go to the Woodland Hills area that’s where most people that are out would be during the day.
I lived in Tulsa back back in 98-99 on the south east side. Tulsa had crime everywhere back then. We were always told to stay away from Peoria back then...
Crime is pretty bad still
It's gotten alot better since the bad old days
@Summer D I have lived here since 2007 I know all about tusla an it's gotten alot better I guess u have no idea what I'm talking about 61?
@Summer D but I still would not want to live on 61 with my kids I did for along time on madison. I live on 13th now an have a for quite a while
@Summer D they do they are good people in bad spots. Thank you have a great day!!
i really appreciate the drive through downtown to show me what it looks like
You missed Cain's Ballroom...the 2nd home of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys. Shame on you!
Don't think I didn't see you run that light my man🤣🤣🤣. Great video my man, however, if you did a part two, post Covid intro, you'd really get the essence of downtown T-TOWN.
Thank you for sharing this.
I live in OKC. Tulsa isn't bad, but I'm much happier in OKC.
More to do but Tulsa is prettier
No OKC is prettier then Tulsa! I lived here ten yrs and it sucks
@@jenniferyates1152 heck no! Idk what you see lol
Idk know what you see in Tulsa then
@@jenniferyates1152 a better river, better parks, our highways aren’t trashy. OKC does have a nicer downtown but overall layout Tulsa is beautiful!
I grew up in East Central Tulsa, just a few miles down Route 66 (we call it 11th Street here) from downtown to Yale. It’s recently become a one-lane road with a bike lane, so no one in their right mind wants to drive it. Add to that the also fairly recent addition of a loop at the downtown end of 11th, and you’ve cut down on people going downtown from a major feeder
Not much traffic downtown. Was this shot on a weekend?
Holiday
Never been to Oklahoma -interestung video giving thumbs up as akways
If he only wants to do a downtown tour, he should go when there's a festival going on!! 😎
Tulsa looks particularly nice good job on the video
Tulsa good video thanks for sharing
Try coming any other time than last year’s Covid scare lol, we have lots of people out and about all the time.
P.s. downtown is like 2% of Tulsa. Most people are south Tulsa. Lots more things to do and see
Right like on 71st around Mingo any time of the day. I try to stay off that street as much as humanly possible lol.
@@TwistedSense EXACTLY 😂😂
What a great video 🙏
New subscriber born and raised Oklahoman 1966. Wow the changes this state has gone through since the civil rights era.
I love your driving music on this one.
I'm from Tulsa and it's beautiful Tulsa rose gardens and the gathering place are beautiful parks
I'm from Chicago never heard of this place but seems like a nice small city
@@keyshawnscott12 TULSA IS BIG ITS THE SAME SIZE AS CHICAGO
I live right by downtown and I can tell you it's much more active now! Restaurants are open again & people are moving out & about. Winterfest will bet set up in about a month and half by the arena. Why didn't you show Cathedral Corner with the beautiful architecture? We're known for having some if the best Art Deco architecture. Tulsa has a lot to offer and the best part of Tulsa is the people. Friendly and generous with smiles and helping hands. I'm thankful to live here.
You said Tulsa is known for 4 things, but you only mentioned 3. What's the 4th thing??
I have a theory that Tulsa doesn’t have that much crime, they just have a lot of cops arresting people and reporting it. They aren’t “cooking the books”. I lived in OKC where you can’t go to the drug store and back without seeing cops, and I’ve been to Tulsa, I’ve partied downtown. It didn’t seem that bad for crime to me. Am I wrong?
i was really hoping you would see me driving by windows rolled down bumping music but you would have if you would have driven around more of the city
Have lived in Tulsa for 30 years.. you should see it when it's poppin. But this is a good video, a good drive-thru to show the buildings and such downtown. Tulsa however is huge. It's a great place
I nearly laughed out loud when I heard you were driving around the industrial and business area of Tulsa on Black Friday during the pandemic, and you wondered where all the people were. We didn't even get together for an in-person Thanksgiving that year. A lot of people were still working remotely. And we sure don't hang out in that part of town when we do go out!
The same cars keep passing you like they were following you around!?
Please do good and bad video on Houston and Dallas someday🙏🙏. Cheers for the content though!
During the week and holidays… downtown is scarce, but during the weekends, it’s packed full of thousands of people, including the river walk
Glenpool is where the highest oil producers was right down the road from Tulsa
Live here 50 miles fromTulsa. There is coffee shops and places to go. Tulsa has a cool downtown park with cafes and such. There is a zoo, air and space museum and if you go to Jenks there is an aquarium near several shops and the river walk. Lived here 15+ years. The people are great but they do not understand 4 way stops😁. I am originally from Northeast.
Sounds great I love it
Ive lived here all my life and Ive always heard of the times when it was booming, we had quite a few famous musicians live here as well, including George Harrison of the Beatles and a few others.
Cool!
George only visited Tulsa to do recordings with Leon Russell.
That was Eric Clapton hence why he did the song Tulsa Times
Is this city safe ?
No it is not!
yeah kinda. not 71st and peoria/sw tulsa
It's like the city is too big for the population. Cuz some areas look deserted. Great video
It’s funny that it looks that way but Tulsa is a fairly densely populated area with over 2000 people per square mile. You just have to leave downtown to find them. 😁
Downtown actually has lots of people. for it to be that empty is fairly irregular tbh. I lived in Muskogee all my life an hour away from Tulsa and left to North Carolina within the last month I’m 22 now.
@@sevrenkingery9106 ok. Thanks for your clarification
Used to have family that lived in Tulsa. Don't miss those trips lol
Haven't read all the comments. My family has lived in Tulsa over 100 years and I've seen downtown Tulsa booming in the 60's and 70's and then die in the 80's and 90's. Well downtown is back with a vengeance. Great restaurants and bars and lots of activity such as Tulsa Tough (one of the top 10 bike races in the nation) and Octoberfest (again one of the top 10 in the nation). Much better things to do and see in Tulsa.
How is this video uploaded 1 month ago, starting this was shot in late November but it isn't even halfway through November yet? 🤔
I think the rest of Tulsa is so much prettier than downtown.
lived in Tulsa for 2 years while I went to Spartan School of Aeronautics. It was awesome
Next time you’re in Tulsa we’ll give you a proper tour. 👍🏻 At least our building made your video! 😂
Thanks
Ok Julie
Are all of the traffic lights in Tulsa on poles on the side of the street? I live in Florida where they hang over the center of the intersections. Very different.
Oklahoma native (of European, not tribal decent) here. I think it's important to point out that Tulsa is spread out, not up like many major cities in the U.S. Hence, the lack of many skyscrapers. All the traffic lights downtown are on poles as seen in the video. Outside of downtown, traffic lights throughout the city are strung OVER the streets corresponding to the lane you are currently in which (I think) is what you are referring to. Fun fact, Tulsa is where the FIRST parking meter was installed.
I hope this helps. ✌
That's a quiet tour