joining me is mayor of tulsa, oklahoma, jt bynum.anted to talk to a mayor of a city dealing with issues because i'm very curious, mr. mayor, i imagine you are feeling it from both sides, from the business communities that are antsy, business leaders looking around going we're not new york and others saying you don't want to become new york. walk me through what that pressure's been like. >> oh, sure. i think you nailed it on the two tensions that are out there. here in oklahoma, we're probably about two weeks behind in the life scale of the virus compared to the coastal united states. that benefited us in one hand because we were able to put in place orders in tulsa and oklahoma city and metro areas earlier in that overall event within our community but it also means now that we're in the week this week where our modeling shows the contagion rate at the peak. the tests should bear that out and the daily hospitalization rate to hit about ten to 14 days after that. and so, everyone here in oklahoma is watching the news about the coasts