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Dec
5
6:30 PM
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7 attended (est.) –
5.001
It's time to talk about all the strange things that have happened to us--good and bad! If you have a weird story or a miraculous story or a just plain funny story, come join us as we eat at Pearl's Oyster Bar on Classen and chat about the real pearls of strangeness that have happened to us in our lives! All are welcome! Meet at 6pm for drinks and we'll order dinner at 6:30pm for the famished. Look for me in the beret and earrings! See you there! Strangers and shy people welcome! This is a Pay Your Own Way Dinner. Fee of $1 goes to Meetup web fee.
Cost:
$1.00
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Pearl's Oyster Bar
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73118
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7 Yes 0 Maybe
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Dec
5
3:30 PM
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3 attended (est.) –
5.001
This group is dedicated to reading the books and topics discussed on Coast to Coast with George Noory. The scope of the book offerings is very wide, so we can go from science to science fiction and from mainstream to Way Out. But it's all in a spirit of fun, learning, and conversation!
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HYATT PLACE - NW
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73118
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1 Yes 1 Maybe
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Nov
26
11:00 AM
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14 attended (est.) –
5.001
If any of you are having a solitary Thanksgiving and want to get out to be with some fun people, join the Wine, Not Meetup group at MCNeal's Catering on Thursday from 11am to 4pm. Says Doni Rimmer of Wine, Not?, the food is, "Fantastic, fresh, homemade ....just like Grandma would make....food. Only $11 per person.....And, that includes beverage." Anyone staying in OKC for TDay, or not seeing family is welcome! This is a Pay For Yourself event and will not be formally hosted. Doni will be there at 1pm, and I don't know yet if I can attend, but fun people are sure to be there, and I can affirm that McNeal's food is yummy soul food at its best! Just like Southern Grannies liked to cook! At least, mine did! I hope to see you! Much Love, Andrea
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McNeal's Catering With Class
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73114
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0 Yes 4 Maybe
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Nov
21
3:30 PM
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3 attended (est.) –
5.001
Let's talk about books! Bring whatever you are reading or whatever you are writing, and be prepared to read a favorite clip out of your latest read! We'll decide our agenda and figure out how we want to do this. Be prepared for opinionated and lively discussions! Don't forget to bring a list of your favorite books!
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HYATT PLACE - NW
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73118
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2 Yes 2 Maybe
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Nov
8
2:00 PM
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1 attended (est.) –
No rating yet
This week's film is Nikita Mikhalkov's "12" (Russia, 2007). "12" is a loose adaptation of “12 Angry Men.” Although modernized, it is nevertheless suffering from a dearth of female characters. Women are in the margins of the picture. At one point, a peripheral (but, as we come to find out, important) character is accused of acting on “jealousy typical of a female.” This is very Russian. Very dramatic and exclusionary. Very Mikhalkov. A Chechen teenager who keeps terrible memories is accused of murdering his adopted father, a retired Russian officer. “Uncle Volodya,” as the kid calls him, was a friend of the Chechen’s slaughtered family. The case seems simple, but the doubts of one man gradually begin to reveal its inconsistencies; revealing also, in perfect symmetry, human tragedies as modern and immediate as life in Moscow, and as old as the world. Says Harbour Winn, director of OCU’s Film Institute,“We learn a lot about people when they tell us, in their own words, what they believe,” Winn said. “These stories dive into their deepest thoughts. Through this exploration we also learn a lot about humanity as a whole.” He said the book will “provide direction and reflection for our cross-cultural study.” It will be available for purchase at the film showings. The Meinders School of Business is located at N.W. 27th Street and McKinley Avenue. Each film in the series will begin at 2 p.m. A discussion of the film will follow.
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Kerr McGee Auditorium
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73106
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1 Yes 0 Maybe
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Oct
25
2:00 PM
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1 attended (est.) –
No rating yet
The topic of a film series at Oklahoma City University this fall borrows the theme from the popular and inspirational public radio program-turned book, “This I Believe.” “This I Believe: The Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women” is a book based on a National Public Radio series. This week's film is Maria Novaro's "Danzon" (Mexico, 1992) in the Kerr McGee Auditorium in the Meinders School of Business. Admission to all sessions is free, but donations to the OCU Film Institute will be accepted. Maria Novaro's "Danzon," an unusual work of Mexican feminism opening today at the Lincoln Plaza Cinemas, is the gentle and earnest story of one woman's voyage of self- discovery. It concerns Julia (Maria Rojo), a telephone operator in Mexico City whose principal joy is the form of ballroom dancing for which the film is named. Julia and her dance partner, Carmelo (Daniel Rergis), have been meeting weekly for six years, which is the full extent of their relationship when Carmelo mysteriously disappears. Julia sets out to find him and manages, in the process, to find herself. Says Harbour Winn, director of OCU’s Film Institute,“We learn a lot about people when they tell us, in their own words, what they believe,” Winn said. “These stories dive into their deepest thoughts. Through this exploration we also learn a lot about humanity as a whole.” He said the book will “provide direction and reflection for our cross-cultural study.” It will be available for purchase at the film showings. The Meinders School of Business is located at N.W. 27th Street and McKinley Avenue. Each film in the series will begin at 2 p.m. A discussion of the film will follow.
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Kerr McGee Auditorium
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73106
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1 Yes 2 Maybe
|
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Oct
24
4:00 PM
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1 attended (est.) –
No rating yet
Let's talk about books! Bring whatever you are reading or whatever you are writing, and be prepared to read a favorite clip out of your latest read! We'll decide our agenda and figure out how we want to do this. Be prepared for opinionated and lively discussions! Don't forget to bring a list of your favorite books!
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HYATT PLACE - NW
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73118
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1 Yes 0 Maybe
|
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Oct
11
2:00 PM
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7 attended (est.) –
No rating yet
The topic of a film series at Oklahoma City University this fall borrows the theme from the popular and inspirational public radio program-turned book, “This I Believe.” “This I Believe: The Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women” is a book based on a National Public Radio series. This week's film is Jia Zhang Ke's "Still Life" (China, 2006) in the Kerr McGee Auditorium in the Meinders School of Business. Admission to all sessions is free, but donations to the OCU Film Institute will be accepted. A modern master of postmodern discontent, Jia Zhang-ke is among the most strikingly gifted filmmakers working today whom you have probably never heard of. During the past decade he has made some half-dozen documentary-inflecte d fictions and several documentaries that weigh the human cost of China’s often brutal, dehumanizing shift from state-controlled communism to state-sanctioned capitalism, a price paid in the blood and sweat of people who have, paradoxically, inspired him to create works of sublime, soulful art. In “Still Life,” which won the grand prize at the 2006 Venice Film Festival, the blood and the sweat run directly into the Yangtze River, where they mingle with more than a few tears. The movie takes place amid the clatter and misery of the Three Gorges Dam, which cuts across the Yangtze in central China. The largest dam in the world, Three Gorges is a site of great cultural and political strife because of both environmental and humanitarian concerns. More than one million people have been displaced because of the dam (more are expected to follow), evicted from their homes by a ravenous hunger for power, electric and otherwise, that is washing them and history away. Says Harbour Winn, director of OCU’s Film Institute,“We learn a lot about people when they tell us, in their own words, what they believe,” Winn said. “These stories dive into their deepest thoughts. Through this exploration we also learn a lot about humanity as a whole.” He said the book will “provide direction and reflection for our cross-cultural study.” It will be available for purchase at the film showings. The Meinders School of Business is located at N.W. 27th Street and McKinley Avenue. Each film in the series will begin at 2 p.m. A discussion of the film will follow.
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Kerr McGee Auditorium
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73106
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7 Yes 1 Maybe
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Sep
27
2:00 PM
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6 attended (est.) –
5.001
The topic of a film series at Oklahoma City University this fall borrows the theme from the popular and inspirational public radio program-turned book, “This I Believe.” “This I Believe: The Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women” is a book based on a National Public Radio series. The film series begins at 2 p.m. Sept. 27 with Fatih Akin’s “The Edge of Heaven” in the Kerr McGee Auditorium in the Meinders School of Business. Admission to all sessions is free, but donations to the OCU Film Institute will be accepted. “The Edge of Heaven” intertwines different sets of German and Turkish characters in a structure that has been compared to “Crash,” “Magnolia” and “Babel.” The 2007 German film was nominated for the Golden Palm and won Best Screenplay at the Cannes Film Festival. The L.A. Times called it a “story about generational expectations and cultural shifts… raises questions it can't answer, which makes it only more powerful.” Harbour Winn, director of OCU’s Film Institute, said the theme offers thought-provoking looks into the human condition. “We learn a lot about people when they tell us, in their own words, what they believe,” Winn said. “These stories dive into their deepest thoughts. Through this exploration we also learn a lot about humanity as a whole.” He said the book will “provide direction and reflection for our cross-cultural study.” It will be available for purchase at the film showings. The Meinders School of Business is located at N.W. 27th Street and McKinley Avenue. Each film in the series will begin at 2 p.m. A discussion of the film will follow.
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Kerr McGee Auditorium
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73106
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5 Yes 1 Maybe
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Aug
29
6:30 PM
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2 attended (est.) –
No rating yet
It's the end of the....No, not the free world. No, not an era. It's the end of SUMMER, so we need to eat and treat ourselves! So, let's gather together at the Fox & Hound off Memorial Drive to expound on our favorite conspiracy theories! So whether it's "Who killed JFK?", alien invaders, the Illuminati, government militias and mind control, or just "is Michael Jackson...Elvis...Ji m Morrison...Paul...Ke n Lay...really dead?", we can have a blast jawing and sharing our favorite kooky--and not so kooky---theories! Doncha just love it? Meet between 6 and 6:30pm for an aperitif--or beer, and then we'll have something to eat. Can't wait to hear YOUR favorites!!! Look for me--I will wear the trademark beret and a CommOk badge!!! See logo on the website.
Cost:
$1.00
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Fox and Hound
Oklahoma City,
OK, 73134
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2 Yes 0 Maybe
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