Chicago Sports

Latest odds have Chicago Bulls as third favorite to land Kevin Durant

Do the Chicago Bulls have a legit shot at landing Kevin Durant? The latest odds show there’s a at least a chance

The Chicago Bulls have been mostly quiet in free agency so far outside of signing Andre Drummond and Goran Dragic, plus bringing Zach LaVine back. But is a big move on the horizon?

The latest odds in the race to land Kevin Durant, who asked for a trade last week, are out and the Bulls are listed as the  third favorite team to land the 12-time All-Star with +1000:

The Chicago Bulls are now the 3rd favorite to be Kevin Durant’s next team at +1000.
They’ve signed two of Durant’s former teammates. Speak it into existence.

Should we expect the Bulls to pursue Kevin Durant?

While this isn’t much to lose your mind over, it definitely piques the interest of any Bulls fan looking to see a big change to the franchise. It has been three days since Durant formally requested to be traded out of Brooklyn, and there has been nothing but rumors and speculations on what deal Brooklyn will pull the trigger on.

The Bulls have not been completely stagnant during this Free Agency period, but have yet to make the big splash everyone has been waiting for. In signing Durant’s former teammates Goran Dragic and Andre Drummond, the possibility of Durant putting on a Bulls jersey is not just a pipe dream. However, the more interesting question remains: Who would the Bulls give up in order to get Durant?

There have been numerous made-up trade scenarios floating around already, and most of them consist of Chicago getting rid of most of their young talent (ie. Draft picks, Patrick Williams, Coby White, Lonzo Ball, Dalen Terry). Such a big trade could also result in Chicago shipping away one of their leaders in DeMar DeRozan.

As the Fourth of July holiday weekend comes to a close, we can expect Brooklyn to find a landing spot for Durant this coming week.

Averaging 29.9 points, 7.4 rebounds, and 6.4 assists for the Nets last season, the 33-year-old Durant has not lost a step in his game and continues to get better every year. The former two-time Finals MVP will be entering his 15th year in the league with his third new team since being drafted back in 2007.

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Fourth of July fireworks: Chicago sees worst air quality of year on holiday

At about 8 p.m. on the Fourth of July last year, air pollution levels across Chicago started to climb. Just a few hours later, as Chicagoans watched brightly colored fireworks explode in the sky, the city reached a level of air pollution more than four times the hourly average of a normal summer evening.

The hours between 9 p.m. and midnight on July 4, 2021, ranked as the most intensely polluted hours the city experienced at any point over the past year, according to an analysis of data on Chicago’s air quality. The new analysis is part of an ongoing project by MuckRock, WBEZ and the Sun-Times.

While the findings, from first-of-its-kind data from Microsoft air sensors installed in more than 100 locations across Chicago, are not surprising, experts say they underscore how holiday traditions like fireworks can contribute to poor air quality in a short amount of time. Researchers found similar spikes in particulate matter, or PM2.5, in Los Angeles on the Fourth, and noted it produced as much smoke as a moderate wildfire. Like Los Angeles, Chicago has among the worst air pollution of any major city in the U.S., and some of the country’s highest rates of childhood asthma, resulting in a dangerous mix for those most vulnerable.

In response to the findings, the Chicago Department of Public Health said in a statement that while it’s against the law to use fireworks in Chicago and Illinois, those laws are ineffective when they are not “regionally applied and surrounding states are more lenient in the sale and use of fireworks.”

Fireworks explode over the Pilsen neighborhood last July 4 near 18th Street and Ashland Avenue.

Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Most types of fireworks, including bottle rockets and Roman candles, are illegal in Illinois but can be purchased in neighboring Indiana.

The city’s health department also said the new data “highlights how disproportionately elevated PM2.5 is in the South and West Sides and can affect the health of vulnerable populations, emphasizing the importance of addressing environmental justice and education about the hazardous effects of using fireworks.”

Microsoft has led a project to build a hyperlocal air quality sensor network citywide. Precious Esie, a recent doctoral graduate of Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health program, was a Microsoft research intern last summer when she noticed the spike in air pollution on the Fourth of July and the unequal effect on certain neighborhoods.

“Pollution levels were particularly elevated in areas on the South and West Sides of the city,” said Esie, who also noted the higher rates of asthma and other respiratory diseases in those areas.

Last year, Adam Niermann, a 43-year-old Irving Park resident and father of three, was just arriving at a park near his home as the city’s air began to fill up with fireworks and pollutants. Niermann’s neighborhood usually follows the same Independence Day traditions: a kid’s bike parade, backyard barbecues and families waiting for the sun to go down and the fireworks to start.

Chicago’s official fireworks go off over the water near Navy Pier, often before the official holiday, with this year’s display taking place on Saturday. Much of the smoke and haze Chicagoans observe on the evening of the Fourth come from individual caches and neighborhood fireworks shows.

At a park near Niermann’s home, families and kids from around the neighborhood gather for a do-it-yourself display of fireworks bought by parents in Indiana. Every year, Niermann said, the air becomes so thick by the end of the night that floodlights at the park and street lights show clouds of smoke drifting in the air.

“By 10:30 at night, it’s just a hazy fog and smoke everywhere that you can see,” Niermann said.

Although fireworks pollution is short-lived, the particles released contain toxic metals, like barium, manganese and copper, which can give people with respiratory diseases discomfort or even cause asthma attacks and lead to hospitalization in some cases.

Huge spikes in Austin, other neighborhoods

During the holiday’s most intense period of pollution, around 10 p.m., five sensors in the network recorded hourly averages over 100 micrograms per cubic meter, according to the new analysis. All of these sensors are on the city’s South Side — in Englewood, South Chicago, Washington Park and Ashburn.

The only area in the city that experienced more intense pollution was in Austin, at about 9 p.m., where a sensor at the Harrison and Central bus stop right next to Columbus Park reached an hourly average of 149 micrograms per cubic meter. These numbers are almost double the citywide averages for the evening, which were already double the 35 micrograms per cubic meter that the EPA has specified as the maximum amount for a daily average. While this threshold is considered dangerous by the agency, the EPA does not regulate short-term pollution events like fireworks displays. Rather, they look for high pollution as a daily average over multiple years.

There are several things experts say can help reduce the human health impact of Fourth of July air pollution.

At home, people should keep the windows closed and the air conditioning on, experts say. Wearing a N95 or KN95 mask can reduce exposure to firework pollution, said Dr. Brent Stephens, a professor at Illinois Institute of Technology who leads a research team that focuses on indoor and outdoor air pollution.

Attending a municipal show rather than using at-home fireworks reduces the amount of fireworks on the holiday and ensures a larger distance between people and the source of the pollution.

Fireworks set off plumes of smoke on July 4, 2021 in the Pilsen neighborhood.

Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

The city itself could begin to shift away from combustion of fireworks to other types of displays, like drones, that do not produce smoke, said Shahir Masri, an air pollution scientist at the University of California, Irvine, who has studied the impact of fireworks on air pollution.

“I hope that cities get more technologically savvy,” Masri said. “If we replaced even 50% of our fireworks with light shows, that’d be a 50% reduction in pollution.”

But official municipal displays are only part of the overall fireworks footprint in Chicago.

The Niermann family usually keeps the windows closed and air conditioning on during the holiday. One of their children had lung problems as an infant, but as a father, Adam was always more worried about emissions from the highway next to their house. Knowing that celebrations of the Fourth also bring some of the worst hours of air pollution has put him on alert.

“I will definitely be paying more attention and noticing what the air quality is like on the holiday,” Niermann said.

Dillon Bergin is a reporter for MuckRock, a nonprofit collaborative newsroom that works on editorial projects with partners, and brings together journalists, researchers and the public on its news platform. Support for this project also came from Columbia University’s Brown Institute for Media Innovation, which provides grants to encourage and support new technological endeavors in media.

Charmaine Runes is WBEZ‘s data/visuals reporter.

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17-year-old boy among at least 4 wounded in mass shooting in Parkway Gardens: fire officials

A 17-year-old boy was among at least four people wounded in a mass shooting early Monday in Parkway Gardens, according to Chicago fire officials.

Officials responded to a call of multiple people shot about 12:20 a.m. in the 6500 block of South Martin Luther King Drive, a spokesperson with the fire department said.

The boy was taken to St. Bernard Hospital in fair to serious condition, fire officials said. A man, 34, was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in serious to critical condition.Another man, 19, was taken to the University of Chicago, also in serious to critical condition.A second 19-year-old man was taken to the University of Chicago in fair to serious condition.

No other details were immediately available.

This is a developing story, check back for details.

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White Sox’ independence from Twins’ rule is on the line starting Monday

Is there a revolution afoot in the American League Central?

Was the White Sox’ three-game sweep of the Giants in San Francisco a declaration that they’re finally ready to heat up like a backyard barbecue?

Or is this just another tease, a momentary sparkle that will fizzle out like all the ones before it?

Let’s face it: Though the weekend was mighty nice for the Sox, this season has been no picnic. Every time it has looked as though a hot streak might be coming, a cloudburst of calamities — injuries and managerial head-scratchers included — has doused the Sox’ fun. One minute, they’ve managed to climb back to .500; the next, they’re amateurishly slathering ketchup on their hot dogs.

Anyway, have you heard the latest? The Twins are coming! The Twins are coming! Yes, the division-leading Twins are coming to Guaranteed Rate Field for a three-game series that starts Monday. There still are 4 1/2 games separating the Twins and Sox in the standings — with the Guardians in between — and these upstarts, who swept the Sox in April in Minneapolis, clearly aren’t messing around.

If the Sox don’t win this series, we probably can go ahead and officially cancel that parade.

But if there’s going to be any sort of grand finale for the 2022 Sox, they’d better bring their bats — and their brooms — to the next three games.

You really want something to celebrate? This dud of an intro is done. And here’s what’s happening:

MON4

Nathan’s Famous Hot-Dog-Eating Contest (11 a.m., ESPNews)

Coney Island, Joey Chestnut, 10 minutes — and one record of 76 hot dogs and buns to break. God bless America.

The Cubs’ Seiya Suzuki in a game in Milwaukee.

Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images

Cubs at Brewers (3:10 p.m., Marquee)

To the Cubs fans who snidely used to refer to Miller Park as ”Wrigley North,” it’s American Family Field now, got it? Good. By the way, you’re all still invited. And feel free to bring an appetizer or dessert.

Twins at White Sox (7:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

Johnny Cueto allowed three or fewer earned runs in each of his six starts in June. Not to tell the man his business, but maybe he just ought to stick with that.

TUE5

Twins at White Sox (7:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

Michael Kopech opposes Chris Archer, who, once upon a time, was the No. 1 pitching prospect of the Cubs. See? There’s another reason to beat him.

WED6

Sky at Lynx (noon, Ch. 26.2)

The Sky have won five consecutive games, look way better than they did at any point last regular season and are 2-0 against the Lynx. Other than that, they’re in big trouble.

Cardinals at Braves (6:20 p.m., ESPN)

Brewers and Mets who? You’re looking at two potential division champions right here, folks.

THU7

Tigers at White Sox (7:10 p.m., NBCSCH)

You’ve got to admit, ”four games at home, beginning tonight, against the worst road team in baseball” has kind of a nice ring to it.

Summer League: Rockets at Magic (9 p.m., ESPN)

No. 1 overall pick Paolo Banchero goes for the Rockets against No. 3 Jabari Smith for the Magic. Will both teams wish they had Chet Holmgren by the first timeout?

FRI8

Summer League: Mavericks at Bulls (3 p.m., ESPNU)

And so the Akoldah Gak era begins. That Dalen Terry kid out of Arizona might be sort of interesting, too.

Cubs at Dodgers (9:10 p.m., Marquee)

It was right around this time last season when the Cubs lost in L.A. to start an 11-game skid that marked the extinguishing of an era. Sheesh, aren’t we just a ray of sunshine?

SAT9

Wimbledon women’s final (8 a.m., ESPN)

Heading into the week, there simply was no denying this was absolutely anybody’s tournament to win. That’s a long way of saying Serena Williamslost in the first round.

WNBA 3-Point Contest & Skills Challenge (2 p.m., ESPN)

Welcome, sharpshooters, fancy dribblers and expert passers. Have a look around, admire the banner up above and please don’t touch the trophy.

Crew at Fire (7 p.m., Ch. 9)

The home side has won the last three meetings in this rivalry. Just saying, Fire coach Ezra Hendrickson is free to use that in his pregame speech if he wants to.

Novak Djokovic is doing that winning thing again.

Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images

SUN10

Wimbledon men’s final (8 a.m., ESPN)

A Novak Djokovic coronation would be his fourth in a row here and — no big deal — Grand Slam title No. 21, breaking a tie with Roger Federer and putting him one behind Rafael Nadal for the most of all time.

WNBA All-Star Game (noon, Ch. 7)

Let’s see if the champs have enough pull on their home turf to get Candace Parker, Courtney Vandersloot, Kahleah Copper and Emma Meesseman on the floor all at once.

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Cubs starter Keegan Thompson limited to four innings Sunday

Poor defensive support cost Keegan Thompson a shot at pitching deeper Sunday, but the Cubs’ starter absorbed his share of the blame for a four-inning stint.

“The whole day I really didn’t have command of my pitches,” said Thompson, who departed after 86 pitches. “I wasn’t really hitting spots much. Usually if I’m hitting my spots, those two-strike pitches are put-away pitches instead of the weak contact and infield hits. The fourth just caught up with me.”

Thompson threw 37 pitches in the fourth, thanks to a ball that was lost in the sun and wind by rookie second baseman Christopher Morel that was eventually dropped by first baseman Alfonso Rivas.

Franchy Cordero was credited with a hit that tied the game at 1, and Thompson later walked Jarren Duran with the bases loaded and two out.

Wrigley all right with Ross

Social media didn’t exist in 1996 when Giants left-hander Allen Watson said Wrigley Field was a “joke” and they should “burn it down” after he allowed five home runs he suggested were wind-aided.

But Red Sox rookie Josh Winckowski created an internet brushfire late Saturday night when he described Wrigley as “a little underwhelming” and “stock standard” to beat writers.

Cubs manager David Ross, who won World Series titles as a catcher at Boston’s Fenway Park and Wrigley, was amused by Winckowski’s comments.

“My experience in both parks is very amazing,” said Ross, who compared the festive atmosphere and scenario in Saturday’s game to what he witnessed at Fenway Park in 2008 and 2013-14.

Ross, however, wouldn’t be goaded by a reporter into suggesting the Cubs trade for Winckowski so he could get a larger sampling of Wrigley.

“He’s a pretty good pitcher, so you talk to [general manager] Jed Hoyer about trades,” Ross said. “I stay out of it.

“I don’t know his [Winckowski’s] experiences, but I appreciate this place a lot. I’ve got a lot of history here, and this is one of the best I’ve been around.”

Medical madness in Milwaukee

First baseman Frank Schwindel and second baseman Nick Madrigal will take live batting practice against left-hander Daniel Norris before Tuesday’s game in Milwaukee and that could determine who is ready to start a minor-league rehab assignment.

“I’ll treat [pregame] Monday as if it were a normal day game,” said Schwindel, who said his back feels fine. Madrigal (left groin strain) has run the bases recently with no signs of discomfort. Norris (left finger sprain) isn’t eligible to be activated from the 15-day injured list until Friday.

Marcus Stroman allowed five runs on seven hits in 2? innings against Columbus in a rehab start for Triple-A Iowa. Stroman, who hasn’t pitched for the Cubs in a month due to right shoulder inflammation, thought he might need one start before returning, but the team will assess his status this week.

As expected, pitcher Alec Mills was placed on the 15-day IL with a low back strain suffered Saturday. Reliever Michael Rucker was recalled from Iowa.

Left-hander Drew Smyly (right oblique strain) will pitch Monday for Class-A South Bend on a rehab assignment.

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Lucas Giolito’s second straight strong start just what White Sox needed

SAN FRANCISCO — Lucas Giolito gave the White Sox six innings of one-run ball Sunday, precisely what they needed on a day their top two relievers and only left-hander were unavailable.

Giolito pitched six innings of one-run, three-hit ball, recording strikeouts for his first seven outs, then relying on contact to finish a 102-pitch outing. His changeup was on point in his second straight strong start.

“This is probably the best my changeup has been in a really long while,” said Giolito, who got 12 swings and misses.

“I know when I execute pitches there is a good chance I’ll get swings and misses and weak contact. For me, it’s about singular pitch focus, this batter and this pitch.”

Giolito’s ERA soared from 2.53 to 5.60 in five starts from May 31 to June 22.

“We’ve been grinding, getting it right [mechanically] and I feel like myself from the end of my last start through this one,” he said.

Kendall Graveman, Joe Kelly and lefty Tanner Banks pitched in the first two games of the series in relief.

Top prospect streak at 40

Shortstop Colson Montgomery, the Sox’ first-round pick (22nd overall) in the 2021 draft, has reached base safely in 40 straight games, including all nine since being promoted from Low-A Kannapolis to Advanced-A Winston-Salem on June 24.

The 6-4 Montgomery, 20, extended the remarkable streak with a double in his first at-bat for the Dash Sunday. He was hitting .330/.430/.498 with six homers, 13 doubles, 31 RBI, 38 runs scored and 31 walks in 52 games going into the game.

“He looks like a guy who’s been at this for a while,” Sox assistant general manager and director of player development Chris Getz said.

“On both sides of the ball he’s very under control.”

When Montgomery was out two weeks with a bruised thumb, he declined an opportunity to shake off rust and go to Arizona for live at-bats before returning to Kannapolis.

“Lo and behond he gets back in the lineup and he’s more productive than before,” Getz said.

Engel about ready

Adam Engel ran full tilt on the bases, perhaps the last box he needed to check before being activated from the injured list with a strained right hamstring.

“I’m really, really close,” Engel said. “Feels a lot better, lot stronger, getting really confident in it.”

Eloy Jimenez is also close to returning from his rehab assignment, perhaps this week.

Yasmani Grandal also ran the bases, but not as much or as hard as Engel. Grandal running “is a good sign,” La Russa said, “but I don’t think we’re close yet [to a minor league rehab assignment].”

This and that

Former Sox Yermin Mercedes was called up before the game and appeared as a catcher in the ninth inning, catching Austin Wynns, who started the game at catcher but mopped up in the ninth inning.

Mercedes doubled against Vince Velasquez, who gave up three runs on four hits in 1 1/3 innings before getting pulled.

*The Sox scored 13 runs without a homer and have three homers in the last 12 games.

*The Sox are batting .272/.321/.397 on the road compared to .233/.296/.355 at home.

“I guarantee you those numbers will be reversed at home from here to the end,” La Russa said. “We’re going to be a very good club at home.”

*The Sox are 7-1 all-time at Oracle Park.

*The Giants’ 40-37 record marks a 10-game difference from 2021 when they were 50-27 en route to a franchise-record 107 wins.

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Cubs starter Keegan Thompson limited to four innings Sunday

Poor defensive support cost Keegan Thompson a shot at pitching deeper Sunday, but the Cubs’ starter absorbed his share of the blame for a four-inning stint.

“The whole day I really didn’t have command of my pitches,” said Thompson, who departed after 86 pitches. “I wasn’t really hitting spots much. Usually if I’m hitting my spots, those two-strike pitches are put-away pitches instead of the weak contact and infield hits. The fourth just caught up with me.”

Thompson threw 37 pitches in the fourth, thanks to a ball that was lost in the sun and wind by rookie second baseman Christopher Morel that was eventually dropped by first baseman Alfonso Rivas.

Franchy Cordero was credited with a hit that tied the game at 1, and Thompson later walked Jarren Duran with the bases loaded and two out.

Wrigley all right with Ross

Social media wasn’t existent in 1996 when Giants left-hander Alan Watson suggested Wrigley Field was a “joke” and they should “burn it down” after he allowed five home runs he suggested were wind-aided.

But Red Sox rookie Josh Winchowski created an internet brushfire late Saturday night when he described Wrigley as “a little underwhelming” and “stock standard” to beat writers.

Cubs manager David Ross, who won World Series titles as a catcher atBoston’s Fenway Park and Wrigley, was amused by Winchowski’s comments.

“My experience in both parks is very amazing,” said Ross, who compared the festive atmosphere and scenario at Saturday’s game to what he witnessed at Fenway Park in 2008 and 2013-14.

Ross, however, wouldn’t be goaded by a reporter into suggesting the Cubs trade for Winchowski so he could get a larger sampling of Wrigley.

“He’s a pretty good pitcher, so you talk to (general manager) Jed Hoyer about trades,” Ross said. “I stay out of it.

“I don’t know his (Winchowski’s) experiences, but I appreciate this place a lot. I’ve got a lot of history here, and this is one of the best I’ve been around.”

Medical madness in Milwaukee

First baseman Frank Schwindel and second baseman Nick Madrigal will take live batting practice against left-hander Daniel Norris prior to Tuesday’s game at Milwaukee that could determine who is ready to start a minor league rehab assignment.

“I’ll treat (pre-game) Monday as if it were a normal day game,” said Schwindel, who said his back feels fine.

Madrigal (left groin strain) has run the bases recently with no signs of discomfort. Norris (left finger sprain) isn’t eligible to be activated from the 15-day injured list until Friday.

Marcus Stroman allowed five runs on seven hits in 2 2/3 innings against Columbus in a rehab start for Triple-A Iowa. Stroman, who hasn’t pitched for the Cubs in a month due to right shoulder inflammation, thought he might need one start before returning but the team will assess his status this week.

As expected, pitcher Alec Mills was placed on the 15-day IL because of low back strain suffered Saturday. Reliever Michael Rucker was recalled from Iowa.

Left-hander Drew Smyly (right oblique strain) will pitch Monday for Class-A South Bend on a rehab assignment.

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‘It Came From Outer Space’ musical review: short on camp, storyline in stage musical translation

Almost 70 years before last week’s landing of the world premiere musical “It Came From Outer Space” at Chicago Shakespeare Theater, the groundbreaking 1953 Universal International movie of the same name had audiences screaming and cringing from behind their 3-D glasses as meteorites, space debris and aliens seemingly hurtled directly at them.

You don’t need much familiarity with Universal’s first 3-D movie or its special effects to appreciate the 85-minute musical commissioned by Chicago Shakes from Joe Kinosian (music and lyrics) and Kellen Blair (book and lyrics). Inspired by that cult classic film (which was based on a story by Ray Bradbury, who also wrote an early version of the screenplay), “It Came From Outer Space” the musical is sheer silliness.

‘It Came From Outer Space’

Both an homage and parody of the movie, the musical follows an alien invasion in the Area 51-ish desert town of Sand Rock. It falls to outsider John Putnam (Christopher Kale Jones) and local schoolteacher Ellen Fields (Jaye Ladymore) to save the townsfolk from their own ignorance and the predators from afar.

Directed by Laura Braza, the production looks and sounds great. There are no 3-D glasses, but the opening scene (among others) offers planetarium-grade astral effects that’ll have you ooh-ing, aah-ing and perhaps even ducking as stars and flying saucers blast off from the stage. That’s thanks to star turns by lighting designer Heather Sparling and video/projection designers Rasean Davonte Johnson and Michael Salvatore Commendatore.

But all the meticulously outsized, whiz-bang lights and projections can’t erase the fact that there are never any real stakes in “It Came From Outer Space.” In amping up the inherent campiness of a movie where you can literally see the wires keeping the UFOs aloft, Kinosian and Kellen have created the musical version of cotton candy: initially delightful, ultimately forgettable.

The townspeople of Sand Rock — Heckie (Sharriese Y. Hamilton, from left), Frank (Jonathan Butler-Duplessis), Maizie (Ann Delaney), Ellen Fields (Jaye Ladymore) and George (Alex Goodrich) — are not quite themselves in “It Came From Outer Space,” based on the 1953 Universal International film.

Liz Lauren

That problem is highlighted in the final scenes, when Kinosian and Kellen turn the comedy down in order to deliver a simplistic, dumbed-down moral about finding common ground with your enemies, even if all you can agree on is the weather. Bradbury’s original has a similar message, but it carries more depth and nuance on the page than it does on the Chicago Shakespeare Theater stage.

Director Braza’s vocally, comedically gifted ensemble makes the most of things. Played by a four-person live band conducted by Kevin Reeks and perched above the stage, the innocuously pleasant score soars as John and Ellen fight aliens and fall in love. As in the movie, it doesn’t take long before aliens are inhabiting the bodies of the local earthlings.

To be clear: These are not aliens who explode from someone’s gut like a burst grapefruit or who blow entire cities to bits. Except for that astronomical lighting/projection design, the special effects here are decidedly, unapologetically low-tech. But for Ladymore and Jones, the cast is double- and triple-cast as townspeople and aliens. We know when they’re aliens because they shamble like zombies and talk like they’ve used Google Translate to learn English. When not inhabiting humans, the aliens manifest as tentacled shadow puppets. (The gifted artists of Chicago’s Manuel Cinema consulted on the whimsical puppetry).

Throughout, choreographer Dell Howlett uses the dance vocabulary of the movie’s Golden Age of Hollywood era, subverting the moves every so often. John and Ellen’s “Brand New Start” romantic duo, for example,evokes classic Fred and Ginger, except Fred is no longer leading by the final pose.

Kinosian’s score is rich in musical soliloquizing, not so rich in memorable music. It sounds as good as it does thanks to the cast’s collective pipes and that crackerjack live band.In the trio “I Can’t Figure Out Men,” Ladymore, Jonathan Butler-Duplessis (In drag as Coral, a hausfrau with an impressive bouffant) and Ann Delaney (as the alien Thalgorian-X) soft-shoe away their frustrations about trying to understand the titular gender. Ladymore belts to the spheres with “Your Place,” wherein she questions why she’s suddenly devoting her life to being the supportive girlfriend to some astronomer she just met. And in “Science Only Knows,” Jones goes all-in with both the belt and the emoting as he praises his own intellectual superiority.

The cast’s prowess aside, “It Came From Outer Space” feels more like a series of really good comic sketches than a solid, cohesive whole.

The movie wasn’t necessarily camp back in 1953, but it is now. And Kinosian and Kellen haven’t figured out a way to honor the camp without allowing its ridiculousness to overtake any kind of story its audiences can actually invest in. If they can find that balance, “It Came From Outer Space” could be out of this world.

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Cubs drop final game vs. Red Sox but expect Suzuki back Monday

After getting buzzed by a 95 mph pitch, Patrick Wisdom took a moment to regain his composure before smacking a 450-foot game-tying home run off Matt Strahm in the eighth inning.

“Love homers,” manager David Ross said. “Homers are nice, especially when you’re down one. I love them.”

Unfortunately for the Cubs, their ability to manufacture runs without an abundance of power during a four-game winnings streak fell short Sunday in a 4-2 loss to the Red Sox in 11 innings.

A two-out throwing error by reliever Rowan Wick soiled an exceptional performance by the bullpen, which worked with no margin for error.

As the Cubs open a three-game series Monday against another perennial playoff contender – the Brewers – they hope the return of Seiya Suzuki can provide at least a power presence that has been inconsistent since he was sidelined due because of a left ring finger sprain May 26.

“To have him back is going to be huge for us,” said Wisdom, who leads the Cubs with 17 homers. “Another power bat, another threat, another arsenal for us to throw out there.

“I’m excited to have him back. That’s awesome. We’re excited.”

Suzuki was to be examined Sunday with the expectation he would be activated from the 10-day injured list Monday. Ross said the plan is to ease Suzuki back into the lineup, but his mere presence would lengthen a lineup that has played without first baseman Frank Schwindel for two weeks.

The possibility of trading impending free agent Willson Contreras would further stress an offense that has attempted more stolen bases in the last two games to generate more scoring.

“When we do get (Suzuki’s) legs underneath him best we can, there will be some maneuvering of the lineup at certain times,” Ross said. “But it will be nice to get him back.”

Suzuki, 27, who hit 25 home runs or more in each of his last six seasons with Hiroshima in the Japan Central League, hit four home runs in his first nine games with the Cubs.

But Ross believes Suzuki “got out of rhythm a bit, which every hitter does.”

Suzuki might have regained much of his timing back, based on his 4-for-9, two-homer performance in three games on a rehab assignment with Triple-A Iowa.

“He’s trying to find that consistency, whether it’s the leg kick, his front side was something he seemed to be playing with pretty consistently,” Ross said.”

The Cubs’ other home run in this three-game series was a game-tying home run Friday by rookie Christopher Morel.

“I think it’s game-to-game for that stuff,” Ross said. “But the ability to hit and run, move the runners over, steal a bag has been big for us at times.”

After connecting on a Strahm pitch, Wisdom took six steps before dropping his bat and starting his home run trot.

“A pitch up and in is never fun, whether it’s intentional or not.” Wisdom said of the previous pitch leading to his homer. “That one felt good.”

Suzuki’s return, however, could result in a demotion for either Narciso Crook, who got his first major league hit Thursday, or Nelson Velasquez, who stole a base and scored an insurance run Saturday.

“When you make those moves, you understand the goal is to get here and stay,” Ross said. “But getting that experience and going back and getting ready, you know you’re on the radar and know your number will be called when you’re needed so things happen as we’ve seen throughout this year in every realm.”

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Brian Urlacher thinks Bears former GM Phil Emery was a “weirdo”

Brian Urlacher wasn’t happy when Lovie Smith got fired

Not all Bears players in the locker room then, including Brian Urlacher, were happy when head coach Lovie Smith was canned following the 2012 season. Smith was fired by one of the worst Bears general managers of all time, Phil Emery, after just one season with Smith. Emery replaced Smith with Canadian Football League head coach Marc Trestman.

Brian Urlacher fired away on Smith’s firing during a “Bussin’ With the Boys” podcast. The Hall of Fame linebacker didn’t have many nice things to say about Emery. Especially on his handling of the Bears head coaching situation. Here’s the transcription of Urlacher’s comments via Logan Mullen of Audacy:

“I didn’t like the way they handled it,” Urlacher said during an appearance on the “Bussin’ with the Boys” podcast. “They fired our GM the year before, and honestly how the f–k do you fire Lovie after you go 10-6? You fire Lovie after we go 10-6, we didn’t make the playoffs. Minnesota decides to beat Green Bay on the last game of the year and they hadn’t beaten Green Bay in like five years.

“They beat Green Bay, knocked us out of the playoffs, and then they fired Lovie and I was like, ‘What the f–k are y’all doing?’ And then they didn’t win 10 games like the next seven years. After Lovie left, they had a hard time winning games.

“It’s just like, why fire the guy? And I know why they fired him, because the new GM was a weirdo and he didn’t like winning, so he fired Lovie … It’s frustrating because obviously I love that franchise, so it’s frustrating to see the direction it went after they fired Lovie.”

Serious shade by Brian Urlacher but Smith needed to go

I don’t blame Brian Urlacher for wanting to stay with Smith. Smith took the Bears to the Super Bowl and was a game away from going again in 2011. And the Bears have been pretty awful other than 2018 since Smith parted with the Bears.

Smith, however, needed to be fired. The Bears needed a fresh start with a new coach who could bring energy back to the locker room and fire the team-up. Smith and the Bears had missed out on five of the last six playoff appearances following the 2006 season. The Bears needed to make the playoffs that season.

While the Bears were a divisional rival’s game outcome away from the playoffs in 2012, it shouldn’t have been left up to chance in the first place. The Bears started out the season 7-1 before losing five of their next six games. (Smith would lose a lot more at his next NFL head coaching job in Tampa Bay.)

That season the Bears were swept by the Green Bay Packers. That’s one major reason why he needed to go. Smith said when he was hired that his goal was to “beat Green Bay“. His failure to win one game against the Packers that season cost the Bears a playoff spot.

Brian Urlacher was right about Emery

Emery was a special kind of stupid general manager. The kind that could only hide how terrible he was at his job for three seasons before being asked to leave. Emery tanked the Bears after Smith by putting in charge a head coach whose previous job in the NFL was half-a-decade earlier as a consultant for the New Orleans Saints.

Firing Smith wasn’t the issue. It was Emery bringing the Bears an inexperienced Trestman who didn’t know how to get the termites out of Hallas Hall that let the team rot. It was a waste of the end of Brian Urlacher’s career.

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