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an everyday life

Tag Archives: OKC

Life after Bobo’s

28 Monday Dec 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Bobo's Chicken, Everyday Life, Journalism, OKC, OKC Dining Out, The Daily

Bobo's Chicken

Until last September, I had never heard of Bobo’s Chicken.  I didn’t know about the red trailer parked a few miles from my house  where six were injured in a drive-by shooting in August  2008.  I didn’t know any legitimate business  opened only on weekends between the hours of 8pm and 4 am.  Most of all, I didn’t know my son Kyle had been asked by The Daily — the OU student-run newspaper —  to show up at  Bobo’s at 2 AM to find a story.  Sometimes it’s good to live life in a protective bubble.

Even before the shootings, the area surrounding  Bobo’s weekend trade was reputed for having high crime.  It’s the  area where my brother once purchased his cocaine.  It’s the part of town where my husband and I paid $600 to get my brother’s car out of hock — even though the business front was a car repair shop, we  had more than a hunch that  the business was little more than a pawn shop for drug addicts in need of cash.  What else can I say but that it’s the sort of area many would think twice about going to — especially at 2 am in the morning.

Kyle wrote what I understand was a tongue-in-cheek story about his Bobo’s experience.  Kyle’s editor called the article, “Chicken To Die For”. Before it was published in The Daily’s on-line edition, the story went through a round of reviews.   I never read the story since  it was pulled within hours of being published.  But I painfully read every letter to the editor, most  which  held no punches in raining down judgment  on Kyle.

There’s plenty of right and wrong to go around when mistakes happen.  But when the chips fall, people do tend to scatter and deflect.  I’m sure Kyle made mistakes.  But I’m also sure that The Daily staff and its sponsors made mistakes too, just as I know that mistakes in judgment were made by everyone who took Kyle to task without knowing ALL the facts…or importantly, the state of Kyle’s mind and heart.

This is not  a defense of Kyle or even an attempt to tell Kyle’s story.  Kyle has publicly apologized and told his own story in the second article he wrote about Bobo’s, which The Daily published (under pressure) a few weeks ago.

Instead, this is a story behind the story; it’s a story of a mom who watched her son go through the worst point of his life without power to help.  I was sad and shaken.  I feared Kyle might  never write again, and I knew that would be a real loss, since writing has been all my son has ever wanted to do.  Even at seven years of age, Kyle was  writing stories complete with maps- a la Tolkien — which he stapled together like books.

It is good then, that Kyle had two caring mentors to steer Kyle through this mess.  Had these two not stood by to cheer Kyle on, the second story would never have been written or published.  I am indebted to both whom Kyle publicly names in his second article.

Not all of the letters to the editor in response to the second article were positive.  But most were.  Most appreciated how tough it was for Kyle to go back to the place where a mistake had been made so that amends could be attempted.

Best of all, there’s some gravy to follow the Bobo’s Chicken story:  Kyle now knows more about who he is and what he stands for after writing both stories about Bobo’s.   And here are the three (a)sides:

  • One, the Dean of O.U.’s Journalism School stopped one of Kyle’s mentors in the hallway to say he found Kyle’s second article deserving of an award nomination.
  • Two, Kyle now has an internship at a highly regarded local newspaper; his Bobo’s experience primed him for the spot in ways that I cannot begin to describe and in other ways that I’ll never know.
  • Three, my husband and I are taking Kyle out to dinner tonight to celebrate Kyle’s first day on the job.  Bobo’s would be our obvious choice; but as it’s Monday, we’re forced to eat at another fine dining establishment.  I’m pretty sure Kyle would have liked Bobo’s just fine.

Happy Holiday Tour 2009

22 Sunday Nov 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Mesta Park, Soul Care

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Tags

Everyday Life, Historic Living, Mesta Park, Mesta Park Holiday Home Tour, OKC, Soul Care

When tour home doors  open the first weekend of December, it will be our great hope to  live up to  Perle Mesta’s reputation as  the “Hostest with the Mostest.”

This year’s five homes  — the stars of Mesta Park’s 32nd Holiday Home Tour — congregate in the west-end of the historic district — just a few hops, skips and a jump from one another …especially the two who are ‘shouting neighbors.’

For the physically able, the weekend will offer a great opportunity to see  the USA neighborhood in their Chevrolegs.  Or if that sales pitch isn’t convincing,  how about this one:? — Just like Nancy Sinatra’s go-go boots, this old neighborhood was made for walking so seeing it by foot is the absolute best way.  That is, as long as the weather plays nice.

There’s no better place to see examples of Oklahoma City’s oldest historic housing.  While it’s true Mesta Park homes share a similar vintage to Heritage Hills, Mesta Park’s unique appeal is that its homes are — well how do I put this?   —  well, they’re just a bit more historical.

Our district is still being “gentrified”;  many homes are still in need of a caring owner who will bring it back to its former splendor.  This year’s tour features two tour homes that have undergone that painstaking transformation.    I’ve discovered some  homes off -tour still have their original kitchen layout and cabinetry, though of course the appliances have changed with the times.  So my point is this:  since Mesta Park homes have undergone less updates over the years, much more of what “tourists” are likely to see is what  the home’s first tenants actually saw and used.

Take my own home for instance, which appeared on the tour three years ago.   All our upstairs bath fixtures are original with few exceptions.  If you pull up the lid of the back of our potty’s water tank, it’s date stamped “1928.”  Our house has some original light fixtures, original door hardware and the original wavy window glass in most of our panes.    Most  tour home kitchens (like mine) are modern.  But the rest of the best will be historical, from the bottom of the original wood floors to the top of the ornate wood and crown moldings.  I speculate that, at least in the spirit of interior historical preservation, it pays to be the poor cousin of the neighborhood.

Most Mesta Park homes are modest in comparison to Heritage Hills.  But Mesta Park has its shares of mansions, with Perle Mesta’s home, sitting at the corner of Northwest 16th and Lee being its most famous.  Most of Mesta Park’s mansions sit within easy walking distance to the “boulevard” — that little stretch of road where the streetcar once traveled up Shartel Avenue before it rounded the corner to head west on 18th Street.  Three of this year’s tour homes rest on the old boulevard streetcar route — with the other two just steps away.

Here’s a sneak preview of this year’s tour homes.  Exterior shots only.  But doesn’t it make you want to peek inside?

We who live in and love our historic homes recognize our place as our home’s temporary caretakers.  I look forward to meeting each to see how the years have treated them, and as I walk through the rooms, I will wonder about the families that once called it home..

Whether we own or rent, it doesn’t really matter; living in a historic home reminds us that we are all travelers — tourists really — just passing through; and that these old homes on this patch of earth will outlive us all.

And by candlelight on the first Saturday evening in December, they will outshine us all too.

801 Northwest 17th Street - Built 1910

905 Northwest 16th Street -- Built 1914

1006 Northwest 18th Street - Built 1918

1009 Northwest 18th Street - Built 1910

924 Northwest 20th Street - Built 1914

“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? — every, every minute?”

-- Thornton Wilder, "Our Town"

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