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  • These businesses have exploded in popularity during the pandemic, and now Apple is getting on board. But are these interest-free payment installments too good to be true?
  • Klarna, Affirm, and other companies are pushing "buy now, pay later" sales models. And consumers are taking advantage.
  • The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is requiring buy-now, pay-later lenders to provide the same protections to shoppers as credit card companies do.
  • The cheap convenience of the "millennial lifestyle subsidy" has gone - does "buy now, pay later" fill in the gaps?
  • Called "buy-now, pay-later" loans, they essentially work the way they sound. Shoppers borrow money to buy goods then pay the loan back over time, often interest-free. Experts share risks and benefits.
  • Tulsa’s homeless advisor says the past two winter storms point to the need for an emergency shelter in the city. State Superintendent Ryan Walters is continuing his push to put bibles in public school classrooms and is slated to speak in Glenpool to a group that believes they are “anointed” by God to run government.
  • Zink Lake fills up with water, Super Tuesday results are in, and the state devotes resources to improve Tulsa Public Schools' literacy rates.
  • A Tulsa juvenile detention officer is accused of sex trafficking, Catoosa gets upgraded vehicle registration services, the man often considered Oklahoma's greatest athlete is recognized by the White House, a local church reacts to new laws from the Methodist denomination regarding LGBTQ+ clergy and members, and the state updates pool maintenance requirements for the first time since the 1970s.
  • Tulsa top official is set to testify at Sheila Buck's trial. A recount of Tulsa’s mayoral election continues. BMX riders from around the country are heading to Tulsa this weekend for a major tournament. That and more from KWGS News.
  • A bill to up the age of sexual consent to 18 in Oklahoma won’t pass this session. An Oklahoma tribal nation is spreading awareness about missing and murdered indigenous people. The leader of the State Senate is concerned over reports the Oklahoma Department of Education did not submit permission to use data to a national media company that ranks education institutions.
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