A judge has awarded Tiger King star Carole Baskin the G.W. Exotic Animal Memorial Park in Wynnewood, Oklahoma – the zoo at the center of the Netflix documentary that was formerly owned by her nemesis, Joe Maldonado-Passage (AKA Joe Exotic).
15.05.2020 - 03:41 / deadline.com
By David Robb
Labor Editor
The Oklahoma Film + Music Office has released guidelines for filming in the state during the coronavirus pandemic. Titled “Filming During COVID-19: Considerations for Oklahoma Filmmaking,” the eight-page document includes the word “consider” more than 50 times.
Oklahoma is not a major filming location, but Tava Maloy Sofsky, the director of the state’s film office, said, “Over a dozen new films have shown interest in bringing business to Oklahoma.”
The list of
A judge has awarded Tiger King star Carole Baskin the G.W. Exotic Animal Memorial Park in Wynnewood, Oklahoma – the zoo at the center of the Netflix documentary that was formerly owned by her nemesis, Joe Maldonado-Passage (AKA Joe Exotic).
Current occupant Jeff Lowe has 120 days to leave the premises
Joe Exotic's nemesis, Carole Baskin is taking over his former zoo in Wynnewood, Oklahoma.
There is some very real news in the world of “Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness”.
Carole Baskin now has control of the zoo formally owned by Joe Exotic. The stars of the Netflix series Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness, are embed in another chapter of their long-standing battle.
Tiger King's Carole Baskin has won control over her rival Joe Exotic's former zoo in Oklahoma. A federal judge has given 58 year old Carole, who was recently tricked into giving her first interview by pranksters who posed as Jimmy Fallon, Joe's Wynnewood-based zoo as part of a ruling in a $1million (£800,000) trademark legal battle.
From May 31 to June 1, 1921, one of the single worst acts of racial violence in American history took place as mobs of white residents of Tulsa, Oklahoma, attacked the black people and black-owned businesses of the city’s Greenwood District.
It’s Joe Exotic‘s worst nightmare. Carole Baskin, owner of Big Cat Rescue Corporation, was awarded the Greater Wynnewood Exotic Zoo in Wynnewood, Oklahoma, on Monday, June 1.
Carole Baskin says she is standing by if and when the animals at Joe Exotic's former Oklahoma zoo need to be relocated after she gained control of the property this week in court.
Tiger King star Joe Exotic has lost his Oklahoma zoo to arch-nemesis Carole Baskin following a $1 million (£820,000) trademark judgment.
A US federal judge in Oklahoma has awarded ownership of the zoo which featured in the Netflix Tiger King series to Joe Exotic's arch rival.
Sunday was the 99th anniversary of the beginning of the Tulsa Race Massacre: on May 31, 1921, white rioters took to the streets of Tulsa, Oklahoma to raze a section of the town known as "Black Wall Street," where middle-class Black families lived and worked. Hundreds were killed, lynched on bridges, burnt in the streets, or cut down with machine guns.
WYNNEWOOD, Okla. -- A federal judge in Oklahoma has awarded ownership of the zoo made famous in Netflix's “Tiger King” docuseries to Joe Exotic's chief rival.
In a plot twist no one saw coming, Tiger King's is taking over control of her nemesis former zoo in Wynnewood, Oklahoma. So, how exactly did this happen? Apparently, Big Cat Rescue Corp. was granted ownership of the zoo as part of a trademark judgement against Joe Exotic.
Tiger King fans could not get enough of the blistering and outright bogus feud between Joe Exotic and Carole Baskin in Netflix’s smash-hit docuseries.
By Nellie Andreeva
In a huge new wrinkle to the labyrinthine “Tiger King” saga, Big Cat Rescue owner Carole Baskin won a lawsuit against her imprisoned nemesis Joseph “Joe Exotic” Maldonado-Passage and was granted control of the Garvin County, Oklahoma property at the center of the hit Netflix docu-series.
Carole Baskin has been awarded control over the zoo that was operated by Joseph Maldonado-Passage, who is known as Joe Exotic.