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Originally Posted by
dismayed
I don't really take comments like the ones some NBA players allegedly said negatively, I see them as an opportunity to improve the city and make it appealing to a wider range of folks.
I can only speak for myself, but I understand where they are coming from with the 'boring' comments. There have been threads on this in the past... but something that I find disturbing about OKC is how much of our recreational activities revolve around eating, or drinking. It is great that we now have a few unique things here like the Land Run Monument and the OKC Art Museum that are places to go and wander around, but there really are not that many 'attraction' type places here. When I think of most major cities they all have their unique schtick. Seattle has its fish market on Pike Street and the underground city, San Fran has Fisherman's Wharf among other things, Chicago has so many places to just wander around and see from department stores to little locally owned shops to various museums... Los Angeles has the Hollywood strip, Beverly Hills, and so many more places, and so on. What is it that makes Oklahoma unique, and how can we make those things fun and interesting?
More 'fun' things other than just eating need to be brought into this town. The NBA is great, other sports activities are good, and so on. I often hear folks talk about Dave and Busters, and I think what they are really saying is that they would like to see more fun activities here in the city not necessarily that place in general. Miniature golf or whatever.... I mean it seems so odd that there are so few pool, shuffleboard, etc. type places around town, and the ones we have are usually in smoke-infested seedy atmospheres. Which leads to another issue... we just need more upscale options here. Upscale fun, upscale dining, upscale everything. I don't necessarily mean $100 a plate diners... just places that look nice and aren't run-down and cheap looking. It would be even better if we actually had top-notch cuisine in the city. We have places like that, but they are few and far between. Places that stay open past 9 p.m. would be good too. As I've mentioned in previous threads, I have taken friends and out-of-staters to Bricktown, supposedly our downtown entertainment district, on a Tuesday or Wednesday night before at 9 p.m., a full two hours before many of the restaurant's posted closing times, to find them already shut down. If it isn't a Friday or Saturday night places like Bricktown are just too inconsistent and local business owners aren't helping the situation by being flaky with their hours. I know, it's a catch-22, but how about just keeping a small skeleton crew around and actually meeting your posted hours.
But what I think is the most significant problem for young professionals in this city is that this city is, from top to bottom from ground up, built around older people and families. There is no single district where young folks are living, where they can be in close proximity to each other (which often leads to meeting new friends, pitching new business ideas, and on and on). Come on, how about JUST ONE district like that. The closest thing to that is Norman, but unfortunately you end up with a bunch of broke, whiny slightly retarded sorority and fraternity folks surrounding you instead of real young adults who know how to make money. There's no district here where you can walk out of your condo and, on foot, walk to a really cool place to shop, or eat, and so on. We are starting to see some of that with Bricktown, but we're not really there yet and unfortunately Bricktown continues marketing to the older families demographic with its price points and with the types of condo configurations and amenities that are being offered by builders down there. Bricktown is a great place to go if you're wanting some Mexican food, beer, or steak, but creative it is not. Once there are more ethnic places, eclectic little locally owned shops selling whatever, more activities, more museums, more public spaces and art, more things going on at all times of day and night and not just from 6 p.mm. to midnight on Friday and Saturday, more interesting people living near one another to get to know and talk to, then we will be a city that has something for the so called 'creative class.'
This isn't one of my more eloquently written posts, it is kind of stream of consciousness, but hopefully it gives some examples of some things that we are lacking.
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