From Republican to Democrat, young to old, artistic to news-hound, fans pick up Oklahoma Gazette from more than 800 locations every week.
Our first issue, printed Oct. 15, 1979, by publisher Bill Bleakley, had a circulation of 2,000 copies. Today, Oklahoma Gazette is still owned and run by Bleakley. It is the largest independent, Oklahoma-owned newspaper in the state with a weekly readership of more than 134,000. Its available (and still free) across the metro.
For our birthday issue, we sought insight from prominent readers and discovered that they stick with us because we write the stories that they want and need to read.
MORE 35TH ANNIVERSARY COVERAGE: OKC, OKG grew together as paper chronicled citys revival. Timeline: A brief history of Oklahoma Gazette. Reader response: What you love most about OKG. Leaders share Gazette memories. OKG Eat: Practice makes perfect! Chef Kurt Fleischfressers curiosity helped establish citys love of localized menus. OKG arts groups have persisted, prospered for decades. As OKG grew, so did OKC's performing arts scene. Oklahoma music scene is still a work in progress.
Mighty Mick
Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett is more than a fan of the Gazette; for many years, he reported for us, too. Theyre stories he framed and hung in his own production office, too, he said.
I wrote profiles of [OU Athletic Director] Joe Castiglione, [gymnasts] Bart Conner and Nadia Comaneci, the OKC Blazers and Cavalry, [arena football coach] Bob Cortese and Bob Stoops, he said.
I wrote the Stoops story before his first game at OU and was told at the time that it was one of the most popular Gazettes that they were flying off the racks. I wrote a weekly sports column for the Gazette, as well.
Although he doesnt recall the first time he was written about in the Gazette, he does remember his first reaction to it. Cornett was shocked that it was free. Yes, the cover price is one reason its so widely read, but Cornett believes theres more to its prolonged popularity.
It hasnt lost its primary focus on arts, entertainment and nightlife in Oklahoma City, Cornett said.
By design
It was 1989, and local graphic artist Matt Goad had just arrived from Arizona. He was wearing a Meat Puppets shirt in art class when another student informed him that he just read in the Oklahoma Gazette that the same band was playing that night in Norman.
Too good to be true. I ran out and snagged a copy, and sure enough, they were playing that night at a club called Rome, Goad said. It was my 19th birthday.
He said it was a serendipitous moment when he discovered something that he didnt realize he needed.
He was hooked.
In the intervening years, he honed his craft as a designer and illustrator and has contributed countless ads and various illustrations for OKG news pieces. Today, he is the creative director at Funnel Design Group.
As a musician, Goads former band Starlight Mints had a write-up around 1999.
I thought we hit the big-time, he said.
Goad said he has valued OKG music reviews on local bands and art and mined events listings since way before Facebook.
Roths child
Jim Roth was the first openly gay person to hold a public office in Oklahoma County. And hes an all-around swell dude.
His earliest memory of the Gazette is one he said he wont forget.
I recall picking up a copy [of the Gazette] in the entry of Leslies Painted Desert on my way in for two-for-one beers with some law school friends in the early 90s, Roth said.
I would peruse the articles, search for restaurant coupons and read about live music venues, although mostly, as a dedicated OCU Law student, I lived vicariously through the Gazette because I didnt have the time or money to do much else.
Roth also contributed to Oklahoma Gazette and was covered in its news section. The first time he was mentioned, he believes, was as a candidate for county commissioner in Oklahoma Countys District 1 in 2002.
I recall meeting with the editorial staff and describing why I was a candidate to reform county government and bring new ideas to local government, he said. It was a great meeting, with good, hard questions, and I was thankful to receive the Gazettes support as the election neared.
Roth enjoys the news and political coverage in the Gazette because he said it seems to dig deeper than most news sources.
I feel the Gazette remains relevant and impactful because it manages to be forward-leaning enough to inspire, while being realistic enough to capture an accurate pulse of the broader community as it evolves, he said.
I always found great solace that the Gazette was a place where accurate news could be covered and that minority views still matter in this democracy.
In 2002, the OCU Law grad was elected as Oklahoma County Commissioner and was the first person in more than a decade to win a second term in 2006.
He was a member of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, appointed by Gov. Brad Henry in 2007. He has been named one of the best lawyers in America.
Today, Roth works at Phillips Murrah P.C. as an attorney who specializes in business.
Print headline: Readers and leaders love Gazette