COVER: Pop-culture portrayals of Oklahoma have improved over the past couple decades
By Jacob Threadgill, Laura Eastes, George Lang and Ben Luschen
Tags: Arts, thor, Agent Carter, August: OSage county, Bill Paxton, Breaking Bad, Broxton, casey affleck, comic books, Drake, Dustin Hoffman, emilio estevez, Ernest Cline, fiction, film, Francis Ford Coppola, Garth Brooks, gray frederickson, Great Plains, Guthrie, Harrah, Hell or High Water, hugh jackman, I Can Only Imagine, James Mangold, jeff provine, jessica alba, john steinbeck, Josua Unruh, Kendrick Lamar, Kevin Durant, kind of kin, Leonardo DiCaprio, literature, Logan, Martin Scorsese, Marvel, Mathis Brothers Furniture, Maysville, Meryl Streep, movies, music, My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys, norman, Okie Comics Magazine, oklahoma, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Film & Music Office, Patrick Swayze, pauls valley, Ponca City, ponyboy, pop culture, Pulp Diction Press, Rain Man, Ready Player One, rilla askew, Rob Lowe, Rumble Fish, Russell Westbrook, S.E. Hinton, Steven Spielberg, Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve, tava sofsky, television, Terrence Malick, The Avengers, the grapes of wrath, The Killer Inside Me, The Outsiders, The Stacks, The X-Files, Tom Cruise, Twister, University of Oklahoma, Wakita, Where the Heart Is, Wolverine, Zak Penn