tulsa oklahoma

The anti-Trump Lincoln Project targeted the president's lackluster turnout in Tulsa, Oklahoma with a Jurassic Park-inspired attack ad.
Famous last words: "Nobody's ever heard of numbers like this," lip-syncs Sarah Cooper over Donald Trump's great rally expectations.
Nigel Farage and other VIPs were flown to and from Tulsa in jets chartered by the Trump campaign for a rally that wound up drawing less than 6,200 people.
The "Last Week Tonight" host pointed out a new low in Trump's presidency.
The Lincoln Project hit Trump's "size problem" in a new video called "Shrinking."
The balloons were used to help raise funds to restore a 1905 Black church that survived the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.
The Saturday event is expected to draw tens of thousands of people. Health experts warned about the event's potential to spread disease.
“It’s a perfect storm,” warned Bruce Dart, who urged attendees to self-isolate and get tested for the coronavirus following the event.
President Trump and his campaign advisers shrugged off warnings from prominent coronavirus task force members, sources told NBC News.
The coronavirus-related hashtag inspired some sick burns against the president.