
For me at least, 2007 has been a pretty crappy year. So for the last six months, I have been eagerly awaiting writing and posting the obligatory “best of” year-end news stories. Enjoy it after the jump…

For me at least, 2007 has been a pretty crappy year. So for the last six months, I have been eagerly awaiting writing and posting the obligatory “best of” year-end news stories. Enjoy it after the jump…
For most part, I no longer partake in (illegal) drug use. Keeping that in mind, I would probably put watching old Ho Ho the Clown videos on my short list of things to do when you are really stoned. And on the list, it would probably fall right behind creating an MS paint shark drawing contest. Or at least a Bob Barry Jr. drawing contest. Hell, that may actually be a good idea.
(p.s.-The Lost Ogle does not condone or promote illegal drug use…unless you are a hot girl.)

Previously: After the Bedlam drubbing, Bob Stoops learned of a plot to sabotage the Big XII title game by kidnapping Sam Bradford. Gary England accepted the case for the Justice League, sending Bryant Reeves and Lauren Richardson to Stillwater to investigate if anyone at OSU might be involved in the plan. They spoke with Mike Gundy and Boone Pickens, but were unable to track down Robert Allen. Gary also assigned “The White Lantern”, Jason White, to personally protect Bradford. Continue reading ‘Merry Justice League of Oklahoma (Episode 2.4)’
I’m just trying to see if we can get 365 straight days of “Merry Something” as a headline on this blog. So far we’re up to 3. That’s just the kind of creativity you guys look for from The Lost Ogle.
Anyway, it’s a snowy day and we’ve all got the Christmas hangover, so none of us really wanted to write anything today. Instead, a look at what was making news 27 years ago. After the jump is an excerpt from an Oklahoman article the day after OSU lost a football game to the University of Washington.
I have to say, I can’t find a byline for this story, but something about it seems just slightly more vicious than the Oklahoman articles you see today. If Mike Gundy were the coach in 1980, I suspect he might have had something to say about this.

If you’re like me, Christmas Eve is pretty much just as big of a day as Christmas. I think that’s because my family is a Christmas Eve family. Granted, we open most of our presents on Christmas Morning, but Christmas Eve is usually the night we all get together, drink wine, eat too much food and play some weird confusing game of dirty-secret-white elephant Santa where you want to be “number one” and things are frozen after three touches. It’s also the night my Aunt Leslie and Grandma get in an argument.
Anyway, if you ‘re also like me, you’ll be traveling outside the state for Christmas this year. Granted, I’m only going to the “Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex” for a few days, but I’ll be crossing one state line and I’ll be able to buy wine in grocery stores. So when I head back to OKC on Wednesday, I’ll have that weird coming “home from vacation feeling” while driving up I-35. And while driving, I may have this classic post that Tony wrote in the back of my mind. It’s called “How to know your home.” He wrote it back when we had less than 100 visits a day, so chances are, you’ve never read it.
This post is intended for people who have, for whatever reason, been forced to leave Oklahoma City and are coming home. Most likely, things will not have changed much, and this guide will assure you that you are Home, Sweet, Home.
1. On your way into the city, you notice that I-35 is under construction somewhere between OKC and Norman.
In the Morningside Heights neighborhood of New York City, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine has been under construction since 1892. As I am not quite old enough to remember back that far, I’m not sure that I-35 has been under construction that long, but I’m fairly certain it’s pretty close.
2. When you go out to eat, you have this conversation:
Waiter: And what can I get you to drink?
You: Coke, please.
Waiter: What kind?
You: Dr. PepperThere is some so-called research on this issue that claims the 405 area code is not the only place where this conversations might occur. I did my own survey (sample size: me) that indicates this is not the case. I have ordered drinks in many different states, and have only received looks of bewilderment after telling people that the word “coke” is simple a catch-all term for all soft drinks.
3. You decide that you want to play a round of golf. You check the weather report, and it says 90 degrees and sunny. By the time you reach the golf course 15 minutes later, a thunderstorm has closed the course.
Brad Henry claims that he wanted to start the lottery to help education in the state, but I’m fairly certain the actual reason was that he wanted there to be at least one thing that was less predictable than the weather in Oklahoma. I’m not even sure that is the case.
4. You turn your radio to the local sports radio station between the hours of 4 and 7 P.M., and you hear no actual discussion of sports the entire time you listen.
I’m told that once, sometime around July of 1982, Al Eschbach mentioned something about sports on his radio show. This is what qualifies him to work on a station strangely titled “The Sports Animal.” His actual specialty is in The Sopranos, Italian food, and misogynistic comments.
5. You see a furniture commercial on television featuring two middle-aged metrosexuals inexplicably holding either a small child or a small dog, and you think nothing of it.
I’m not saying the ads for a certain business located at 3434 W. Reno make no sense, but can someone explain to me why these two brothers are perpetually holding babies and dogs? Do they have children that simply don’t age? Is the furniture dog-proof? What is the deal here?
There you go. Merry Christmas Eve everyone.

It’s been a tough week for a CPA/blogger. A multitude of things has made it difficult for me to serve you, TheLostOgle.com reader. For one, year end is fast approaching which has created much work for me, meaning no downtime during the day to rattle off thousand word tomes about Tom Coburn investigating spending bills in search secret slush funds for recruiting lesbians in Southwest Oklahoma or a journal about me fighting holiday traffic. Second, it seems I have had a busy social life for the past couple of weeks. If I’m not out taking my kid to scream at Northpark Mall’s Santa Claus, I am actually being invited to Christmas parties…which is strange considering my behavior at parties is basically limited to standing against the wall and engaging anyone who comes across me in a debate about whether accrual or cash basis accounting is superior. (If you have to ask, the answer is accrual, you cretin.)
The last reason is that I have been contracted out by the Santa Claus to fill the stockings of Oklahoma’s finest citizens. Rather than waiting until Christmas morning to find out what is in store, I figured I would cut the suspense and let you know after the jump. Continue reading ‘Here Comes Santa Clark’

Awhile back, a story broke that pretty much topped the list of awesomest things ever.
The Great White Way will never be the same: In an exclusive interview, Wayne Coyne, lead singer of the Flaming Lips, told EW.com that the psych-rock band will team up with acclaimed TV writer and show creator Aaron Sorkin to turn the group’s 2002 album Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots into a Broadway musical.
When I read this, I was so excited that I got up and started frantically humping the chair at my desk. I assume everyone else did the same thing.
Seriously, Aaron Sorkin collaborating with the Flaming Lips? It doesn’t get any better than that. I’m not really surprised he’s a fan. It makes sense. He’s a big fan of mushrooms and I once heard a rumor that some fans of the Flaming Lips have done drugs before. I’m not saying that’s true, it’s just a rumor I heard. Anyway, I’m not exactly sure how this musical is supposed to be executed, but I assume it will have a guy in a bubble talking really fast.
This story first broke several months ago in March, and now it’s already July (I think. I don’t really pay attention to “human time”. This is July, right?) and to the best of my googling ability there have been exactly zero updates. What’s going on in the writing/production of this musical? Is it still on? Surely there is at least one reader that can give me some new information on this subject.

Sorry to get all OkieFunk.com on everyone, but if you want an angry good laugh then you have to read this Inhofesque Oklahoman editorial at NewsOK.com. Here are some blurbs from it:
While many Americans may not know it, there’s considerable disagreement in scientific circles with the view that humans are the major cause of global warming…
The naysayers have credible arguments. A number of climate experts think Gore exaggerates the warming threat and humankind’s contribution. They take issue with the methodology of the United Nations’ panel that periodically releases reports predicting dramatic climate change…
“The whole process is a swindle,” writes Vincent Gray of New Zealand, a climate scientist and member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s expert reviewers’ panel. “The IPCC from the beginning was given the license to use whatever methods would be necessary to provide ‘evidence’ that carbon dioxide increases are harming the climate, even if this involves manipulation of dubious data and using peoples’ opinions instead of science to ‘prove’ their case.”
So is Gore right, or does he wield the biggest megaphone? Are humans causing global warming, or does that notion have exaggerated acceptance because so many environmentalists, activists and government bureaucracies are pushing it — with philosophically aligned, awards-giving groups like the Nobel committee and Hollywood following them?
Our state newspaper, ladies and gentlemen! I hope it makes you proud.
Anyway, you would think with all the “considerable disagreement” and “naysayers with credible arguments” out there in the world, that the Oklahoman could maybe do better than quote some random scientist from New Zealand. You would think that, but then you would realize that you are reading The Oklahoman, where logic and common sense really don’t matter. Hell, maybe next week they’ll write an editorial touting “Intelligent Design” over evolution or possibly something regarding the scientific “debate” on if the world is round. After reading the garbage found both above and throughout their editorial section, there is nothing that would really surprise me.

I found this picture at the Oklahoma super-blog Dustbury. Even if this is a photoshop creation, it’s still pretty damn funny. The only things that would make the picture more funny is if Grant Johnston were the weatherman or if it were snowing in Pennsylvania.
(Sorry I took it that far. The devil made me do it.)
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