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'Focus: Black Oklahoma': Tulsa's first Black mayor, holiday stress, Black Wall Street film

Tulsa Mayor-elect Monroe Nichols celebrates his win on Nov. 5 election night.
Jamie Glisson
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Focus: Black Oklahoma
Tulsa Mayor-elect Monroe Nichols celebrates his win on Nov. 5 election night.

This episode of Focus: Black Oklahoma features stories on Monroe Nichols' historic mayoral win, how the Tulsa Dream Center helps during the holidays, a new film on Black Wall Street and more.

On Nov. 5, Monroe Nichols was elected Tulsa’s first Black mayor in the city’s 129-year history. FBO’s Jamie Glisson followed Nichols and his team for the day.

In the fall of 2020, Michael Hill, a Black citizen of the Cherokee Nation, woke up in the middle of the night to the sound of someone banging on the windows of his home. He called police for help, but the police arrested Michael in his own front yard. When trying to get his case heard in tribal court he was rejected because though he has tribal citizenship, he has no blood quantum and by federal law is not legally an Indian. His story is told in a newly released Audible Original documentary called "Tribal Justice: The Struggle for Black Rights on Native Land," reported and written by two award-winning Indigenous journalists, Allison Herrera and Adreanna Rodriguez. The following excerpt is the second installment of FBO's broadcast of the documentary.

Though the holiday season can be a time of joy and celebration, for some families it can be a time of struggle and stress. The Tulsa Dream Center works to address some of these disparities. Here’s Danielle A. Melton with details.

Bishop Silvester Scott Beaman, the 139th Elected and Consecrated Bishop of the AME Church, and chair of the White House's Advisory Council on African Diaspora Engagement and longtime spiritual advisor to President Biden, reflects on his role in fostering connections between African Americans and the broader African diaspora. Here’s our recent interview at Tulsa's historic Vernon AME Church, where Beaman shared his vision for strengthening ties and addressing challenges facing Black communities both in the U.S. and across the African continent.

Greenwood Rising: The Rise of Black Wall Street is a new full-length motion picture that was released Oct. 11 on the Fawesome and Future Today streaming platforms. This movie centers on O.W. Gurley, a visionary and trailblazing businessman whose hard work laid the groundwork for Tulsa’s Greenwood District and the prosperous Black Wall Street. The film’s director, Aaron L. Williams, and lead actress Fatima Marie, who plays Emma Gurley, spoke with FBO’s Cepeda Cheeks about the film.

Medicine, fashion, and film converge as Dawn Carter brings us the second of a three part series on Oklahoma's Black Rodeo and Culture. This series, as well as a photo exhibition featuring Black Rodeo photos by Jamie & Richard Glisson of ImpressOK Studio, is funded by a grant from Oklahoma Humanities. Please visit rodeo.kosu.org and sign up to receive further details on the February 1, 2025 exhibition opening event.


Focus: Black Oklahoma is produced in partnership with KOSU Radio and Tri-City Collective. Additional support is provided by the Commemoration Fund and Press Forward.

Our theme music is by Moffett Music.

Focus: Black Oklahoma’s executive producers are Quraysh Ali Lansana and Bracken Klar. Our associate producer is Jesse Ulrich.

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