Oklahoma
Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers: How to watch Game 4 of the 2025 NBA Finals tonight
The Oklahoma City Thunder are facing the Indiana Pacers in the 2025 NBA Finals. The odds heavily favor the Thunder over the Pacers, which is no surprise considering the Thunder were 68-14 in the regular season and the No. 1 overall seed in the Western Conference. However, the fourth-seeded Indiana Pacers are currently leading the Oklahoma City Thunder, 2-1 in the finals series.
Game 4 tips off in Indiana tonight, June 13, at 8:30 p.m. on ABC. Here’s everything you need to know about how to watch the Pacers vs. Thunder NBA Finals.
How to watch the Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Indiana Pacers Game 4:
Date: Friday, June 13
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Time: 8:30 p.m. ET
TV channel: ABC
Streaming: DirecTV, Fubo, Hulu + Live TV and more
NBA Finals channel:
All games in the NBA Finals will air on ABC — sweet and simple!
How to watch the NBA Finals without cable:
DirecTV’s MySports pack is a curated live TV package geared toward sports fans, with access to local ABC, plus ESPN’s suite of channels, TBS, TNT, USA, FS1 and an included subscription to ESPN+ for $69.99/month.
The MySports pack guarantees access to thousands of live televised events, plus all the live-streaming and library content on ESPN+, all on one interface and one bill. You can try it for free for five days before committing.
Try free at DirecTV
Who is playing in the NBA Finals?
The Oklahoma City Thunder will face the Indiana Pacers in the 2025 NBA Finals.
2025 NBA Finals TV schedule:
All times Eastern.
Thursday, June 5
Game 1 – Indiana at Oklahoma City: 8:30 p.m. (ABC)
Sunday, June 8
Game 2 – Indiana at Oklahoma City: 8 p.m. (ABC)
Wednesday, June 11
Game 3 – Oklahoma City at Indiana: 8:30 p.m. (ABC)
Friday, June 13
Game 4 – Oklahoma City at Indiana: 8:30 p.m. (ABC)
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Monday, June 16
Game 5 – Indiana at Oklahoma City, if necessary: 8:30 p.m. (ABC)
Thursday, June 19
Game 6 – Oklahoma City at Indiana, if necessary: 8:30 p.m. (ABC)
Sunday, June 22
Game 7 – Indiana at Oklahoma City, if necessary: 8 p.m. (ABC)
*if necessary
More ways to watch the NBA Finals:
Oklahoma
Drones Highlight Boom in the Valley – Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma
Published July 14, 2026
TVSHKA HOMMA, Okla. – The Choctaw Nation hosted a new and exciting Boom in the Valley Friday, July 3 with more than 400 colorful drones lighting up the Tvshka Homma sky. Almost a dozen food trucks, three Choctaw artists’ booths, activities that included cultural games such as a stickball toss and rabbit sticks, as well as karaoke, dunk tank, face painting, and more were set up on the Historic Choctaw Nation Capitol Grounds. All ages from across the region attended the free, public celebration of America’s 250th anniversary.
Photo

Photo by Choctaw Nation
Oklahoma
Oklahoma senator renews push for new agency that focuses on child welfare services
Sen. Paul Rosino, R, Senate Health & Human Services Chairman, is renewing an effort to create a single Oklahoma agency focused exclusively on children after similar legislation failed to advance last year.
Senate Bill 1570 passed the Senate but never received a hearing in the House. Sen. Rosino, who is behind the proposal, says growing concerns about child welfare and the well-being of Oklahoma children prompted her to bring the idea back.
A “holistic approach” to children’s services
The proposal would combine several child-focused programs and agencies under one umbrella, including child welfare, foster care, behavioral health services, the Office of Juvenile Affairs and other youth-related programs.
The goal, he said, is to create a more coordinated system that addresses the full range of children’s needs.
“We need to have a sole agency that really concentrates on kids,” said Sen. Rosino. “By having a holistic approach, everything in one agency would be helpful to children.”
Concerns about child welfare
Sen. Rosino says Oklahoma must do more to protect abused and neglected children, noting that intervention doesn’t always mean removing a child from a home.
In some situations, he said, families simply need education, support or services. However, safety concerns can require children to be placed elsewhere.
He also pointed to growing behavioral health challenges facing Oklahoma adolescents as another reason for restructuring services.
DHS already handling broad responsibilities
The proposal is not intended as criticism of the Oklahoma Department of Human Services, he said.
DHS currently oversees a wide range of programs, including aging services, childcare, family support and services for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
“DHS is a behemoth,” said Sen. Rosino. “Those people work very hard over there.”
Still, the senator believes child welfare is an area where Oklahoma can improve by creating a dedicated agency focused solely on children.
Not a quick fix
The senator acknowledged the proposal is not a “silver bullet” and would take time to implement.
He said he worked with stakeholders, including foster care advocates, and revised the legislation multiple times based on feedback.
According to the proposal, most existing funding would move with the programs into the new agency, limiting the need for significant new spending outside of administrative costs.
Building support for a long-term change
Sen. Rosino described the effort as a multi-year project requiring lawmakers to understand why a structural change is needed.
While disappointed the bill stalled in the House last year, he said she believes support is growing.
“It’s going to take some time to change hearts and minds,” said Sen. Rosino. “I’m hoping this year we can make some headway there.”
Key Takeaway
Supporters say a standalone children’s agency would give Oklahoma a more focused approach to child welfare, foster care and youth behavioral health, while opponents and lawmakers continue to weigh the costs and logistics of a major government reorganization.
Oklahoma
OKFB pleased with newly proposed settlement in long-running State of Oklahoma poultry case | Oklahoma Farm Bureau
Oklahoma Farm Bureau President Stacy Simunek released the following statement after the State of Oklahoma and 11 Arkansas-based poultry announced Monday, July 13, that a nearly $44 million settlement had been reached in the decades-long lawsuit regarding the application of chicken litter in the Illinois River Watershed.
Oklahoma Farm Bureau members are pleased with the proposed settlement reached between the State of Oklahoma and 11 poultry companies operating in Oklahoma’s Illinois River Watershed over the state’s long-running lawsuit that was based on outdated science and production methods.
The original lawsuit, filed in 2005, created uncertainty for family farmers and ranchers for more than two decades, and this agreement provides a way for Oklahoma farm and ranch families to continue their important work to feed Americans without being unnecessarily burdened.
We appreciate Attorney General Drummond working with the poultry industry to reach a proposed solution that allows the poultry companies and our family farmers to continue to produce the food products we all rely upon while ensuring our shared natural resources are safeguarded for generations to come.
Our state’s farmers and ranchers, including poultry producers in the Illinois River Watershed, are committed to implementing voluntary environmental stewardship practices each and every day to ensure their land is productive and our rural communities are protected.
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