Entertaining and Wholly Unrealistic After watching four episodes of "Tulsa King," I can say it is thoroughly entertaining, mostly on the back of Stallone. To enjoy the show, however, one has to believe an aging mobster who was just released from prison can walk into Tulsa, OK and start taking the town over literally on day one. You have to buy the idea that a 75 year old, working basically alone, can terrorize people so much they start turning their money over to him. Oh, the same geriatric bad guy is also so good he's fully politically-correct (must have learned that in prison) and still manages to take the moral high ground at every turn. This man barely knows what a weed dispensary is one minute, then in no time he's telling the proprietors how to run the place and even using industry jargon like it's second-nature. And, we're to believe the fine people of Tulsa are so backwards it didn't occur to them to get a security camera or two for their business. They even have the stereotypical "security guard" buffoon literally eating from a bag of Cheetos while on duty. Stallone does a good job in a role that seems like it was written for him, and the overall production value of the show is good. But, if you are a thinking person in the least, you will have trouble with this one. It seems the only person in the cast with half a brain is the African-American driver Stallone hires to haul him around. That guy's family is so cool, his father, who is adamantly opposed to him getting involved in this organized crime world, goes out with Stallone's band of misfits one night to rough up some local opposing thugs. Sure, whatever works. Make no mistake, "Tulsa King" is entertaining in many ways, but calling it mindless entertainment is the understatement of the decade.