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Sporting Global | Sporting Global

It lives in every backyard baseman and grade school goalie. It lives in soccer stars, gridiron giants and world-class fighters. The challenge is translating the passion of little league into a legacy that lasts. Sporting Global approaches that challenge with quality, determination and a commitment to excellence to match the elite athletes and organizations we represent. With our help, global brands expand to new markets, and lifelong fans are born – ensuring the long-term financial success of th

My background in PR was a crash-course in adaptability. I’ve since helped a diverse group of freelance clients create copy that moved their audience. Let’s make words work for you.

405.255.1915 taylor@bollingerbranding.com

Owning Alopecia

“Bald is beautiful!” Or so a homeless man shouted at me outside a storefront the other day. A kind sentiment, truly. But one I’m only starting to believe after almost three years of losing my previously Tresemmé-worthy tresses.

I had alopecia areata as a child. When I was four years old, the autoimmune disease caused me to lose patches of hair behind my ears. It grew back within a year and didn’t resurface until the very first day of 2021 when I found a completely bald, dime-sized patch on top

The Bright Side of Blindness

If Hannah Dangle could offer one piece of encouragement to the world, it’s this: “you can do hard things.” And doing hard things is something Hannah knows a thing or two about. In her 23 years of life she’s overcome daunting diagnoses, and now is navigating total blindness.

Hannah was first diagnosed with Burkitt lymphoma in October of 2019. The cancer attacked her entire body. “I was diagnosed on Halloween, which makes sense. This was not a Christmas kind of diagnosis,” Hannah said, her sense

A Marathon of Miracles

Doctors can’t explain her recovery. Words can’t capture her resilience. Rachel Foster is a walking miracle.

Following an electric scooter accident in November, the Moni’s Italian Restaurant chef and co-owner was left with a catastrophic brain injury, 17 broken bones and on life support. Doctors predicted the best-case scenario was a life where Rachel would never eat or breathe on her own – and that was if she woke up.

Just before her husband John made the impossible decision to remove Rachel f

Emily Sutton: Motherhood & Mother Nature

“You may think storms are not that dangerous, but some can spawn killer tornadoes,” a young Emily Sutton explained in her fifth-grade report on tornado safety. It was a natural choice of topic since her earliest memories include watching storms roll in with her dad outside of their Chicago home.

While it seems her career was written in the stars, Emily says it didn’t occur to her until college.

“It seems obvious but it didn’t cross my mind. I didn’t see many females doing the weather growing u

Three Lifesaving Numbers: 988

Lauren never struggled with mental health until the birth of her son. Looking back on the depths of her postpartum depression, she says a lifeline would have been a “game changer”.

Though Kristen appeared outwardly strong following the loss of her mother, she was experiencing night terrors, feelings of purposelessness and a loss of hope. She knew she needed help, but wasn’t sure where to turn.

After her divorce, J’Shawna found herself wondering if her family and friends would be okay without h

The History Fan Girl

Stephanie Craig has visited 57 countries, 45 states, 144 World Heritage Sites, and 21 National Parks. Aside from being quite the conversation starter, it’s also her profession, and the mother of two says she has no plans to stop.

“I launched my first blog in 2015,” Stephanie said. “It was before people knew how to make an income with blogging. So there was a lot of trial and error, but eventually I learned how to provide valuable content to my readers, and support myself with my writing.”

The

Fostering Hope

Anna was born in 2007 in the Oklahoma County jail. She was 10 weeks premature and pronounced clinically dead by medics, but her story wasn’t finished. Miraculously, she regained her heartbeat and lived on a ventilator at Children’s Hospital for the next six weeks. Even with expert care, her outlook was not great. After a failed kinship placement, she returned to the hospital with double pneumonia and “failure to thrive.” Doctors warned that without the bond of a loving parental figure, Anna woul

Getting the Golden Ticket

Just a few months ago PJAE was a graphic designer dreaming of a musical career. Today, he’s a top 26 contestant on American Idol who Katie Perry said people should be paying to listen to, and his dream is rocketing toward reality.

A graduate of UCO’s Academy of Contemporary Music, PJAE says his family was not musically inclined, but it was always a part of his life, growing up in Lawton.

“As a child, my daycare was in the basement of a Baptist Church,” PJAE said. “The teacher sent me home with

Dancing Her Art Out

It all starts with a blank canvas, paint and pointe shoes. What happens next has captivated 3.1M followers on TikTok, 125K on Instagram and countless patrons of the Oklahoma City Ballet. They all want to see what Autumn Klein will create next.

When Autumn’s parents enrolled their tip-toeing two-year-old in ballet as an outlet for her energy, they never predicted it would become her passion, profession, and one-of-a-kind painting process. While Autumn’s already-famous artwork took form just this

Edmond City Center Complex

Edmond is making a $44 million investment in the heart of its city. The new Edmond City Center Complex will house City Hall, municipal court, a five-story parking garage and a gathering space to welcome locals and visitors there for business, lunch or leisure.

“We’re a growing community, and our existing spaces are no longer meeting the needs of our citizens or employees,” said Andy Conyers, Edmond Assistant City Manager.

“We’ve made the best use of the three buildings we currently occupy, rea

The Accidental Organizer

Professional organizer Amber Austin compares hiring her to hiring a personal trainer who loves to eat. It might sound odd at first, but according to the clients whose homes and hearts she’s impacted over the last 13 years, it actually makes sense.

“I am not a naturally organized person,” Amber said. “I grew up in a chaotic, unorganized home. It was out of control. I was hesitant to share this at first, but I found that my story gives hope to people like me – if I can do it, they can too.”

Ambe

Second Career Success

“What do you want to be when you grow up?”

We ask children this question all the time but rarely inquire about the career goals of other adults. We assume they are set, satisfied, or stagnant – that what they are doing now is what they will continue to do and the window for change has closed. But what if this view of career paths is out of date? Perhaps rather than being straightforward, careers can be subject to twists, turns, and changes, with a wide shoulder for pursuing dreams.

Meet two wh

Coming to East Edmond: New Eats & Experiences

Something new is underway at I-35 Frontage Road, just south of 2nd Street — and no — it’s not another hospital. The three-story, multi-use facility will house Regent Bank and Enhanced dental, along with Hatch Early Mood Food, Chicken Foot, and Sidecar Barley and Wine Bar, complete with a rooftop feature. Set to open in late 2022, visitors are invited to experience what’s being called an “upscale, urban oasis.”

The new experiences Edmondites can expect from The Regent Center at Fox Lake North ar

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