What’s New

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.


It worked!

Leasing CHA land to the Chicago Fire is part of a longstanding plan to gentrify the city.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

With support from our sponsors

Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.


It worked!

Leasing CHA land to the Chicago Fire is part of a longstanding plan to gentrify the city.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Preview a brave new Kimski at the next Monday Night Foodball

Won Kim does not care that your grandma hates his food. One month into a five-month sabbatical from Bridgeport’s Korean-Polish Kimski and the chef is feeling fine.

“I think I did a pretty good job trying to respect each culture,” he says. “I was downright fucking paranoid and scared to honor the babcias and the halmeonies out there. But what I’ve come to realize is they don’t give a shit. They just want authenticity. Grandmothers hate me and my food, and I’m OK with it.”

Six and a half years in, Kimski’s evolved far beyond its initial Ko-Po experiment, both in terms of food and its place in the restaurant community. It’s ground zero for Marz’s mutual aid food service Community Kitchen, and it’s a prolific chef incubator, nurturing talent and launching independent careers for dozens of young chefs.

Kim’s earned some me-time.

And he’s earned this unfamiliar serenity that’s allowed him to take a walkabout in Amsterdam and Brussels without freaking out about whether he’d ordered onions. He’s been painting like mad, free from the worry about whether he left the kitchen with enough buns. And he’s been able to help out the chefs popping up at Kimski until his return without stressing that the restaurant will spiral into chaos.

It’s also allowed him to start thinking about the next phase for Kimski’s menu, which you can get a taste of December 12, when Kim takes over the kitchen at the Kedzie Inn for Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up in Irving Park.

What’s that look like? It’s a lot more traditionally Korean, a little more upscale, but above all, “I want to just selfishly make food that I want to eat.”

dduk bbok ski, Kimski

That means your grandma might be weirded out by the way he tosses his chap chae á la minute with a ginger-sesame dressing instead of the standard soy-vinegar-sesame oil trio. She’ll probably serve some side-eye to the Heffer BBQ-smoked brisket on his bo ssam platter, wondering where the boiled pork belly is. Her brow will furrow when she tastes his short rib marinade on the kalbi platter, which skews a lot less sweet than most, but still, “That’s the most humble fucking Korean meal. You’ve got your protein, you’ve got your pickled veggies, you got your carbs. That’s my ode to how I grew up eating at restaurants and at people’s homes. In the 80s, that’s what put us on the map. White people were like, ‘OK, we fuck with Korean food now.’”

I’m not sure what grandma can possibly dislike about his kimchi jjigae, stewed with his mom’s own home-fermented cabbage, but she will likely be conflicted: “She hates it when I use her food. She makes it specifically so that I eat it. But I think she also loves the idea of it feeding strangers.”

Does change make you nervous? Don’t sweat. There will be some Kimski classics, like the Ko-Po beef sandwich dressed with charred shishitos and smothered in cheddar sauce; and the dduk bbok ski, sweet and spicy rice cakes with muenster cheese and fried egg; and the soy-sesame sour cream-drenched fries with chili oil, nori, and scallions.

Just look at his mad skills, courtesy of Tony Trimm and the Home Feed Show:

https://chicagoreader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/HF_E02_RAMEN_RIFT_WON_CUT-2.mp4

Don’t bring granny this Monday beginning at 5 PM at 4100 N. Kedzie. Just walk on in and order. No preorders necessary.

Meanwhile, there’s one more Foodball left in 2022, when veteran Schneider Provisions team up with Zeitlin’s Delicatessen on the first night of Hannukah, December 19. Keep your eyes open for a brand-new Foodball schedule in January.

Read More

Preview a brave new Kimski at the next Monday Night Foodball Read More »

Preview a brave new Kimski at the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon December 8, 2022 at 4:11 pm

Won Kim does not care that your grandma hates his food. One month into a five-month sabbatical from Bridgeport’s Korean-Polish Kimski and the chef is feeling fine.

“I think I did a pretty good job trying to respect each culture,” he says. “I was downright fucking paranoid and scared to honor the babcias and the halmeonies out there. But what I’ve come to realize is they don’t give a shit. They just want authenticity. Grandmothers hate me and my food, and I’m OK with it.”

Six and a half years in, Kimski’s evolved far beyond its initial Ko-Po experiment, both in terms of food and its place in the restaurant community. It’s ground zero for Marz’s mutual aid food service Community Kitchen, and it’s a prolific chef incubator, nurturing talent and launching independent careers for dozens of young chefs.

Kim’s earned some me-time.

And he’s earned this unfamiliar serenity that’s allowed him to take a walkabout in Amsterdam and Brussels without freaking out about whether he’d ordered onions. He’s been painting like mad, free from the worry about whether he left the kitchen with enough buns. And he’s been able to help out the chefs popping up at Kimski until his return without stressing that the restaurant will spiral into chaos.

It’s also allowed him to start thinking about the next phase for Kimski’s menu, which you can get a taste of December 12, when Kim takes over the kitchen at the Kedzie Inn for Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up in Irving Park.

What’s that look like? It’s a lot more traditionally Korean, a little more upscale, but above all, “I want to just selfishly make food that I want to eat.”

dduk bbok ski, Kimski

That means your grandma might be weirded out by the way he tosses his chap chae á la minute with a ginger-sesame dressing instead of the standard soy-vinegar-sesame oil trio. She’ll probably serve some side-eye to the Heffer BBQ-smoked brisket on his bo ssam platter, wondering where the boiled pork belly is. Her brow will furrow when she tastes his short rib marinade on the kalbi platter, which skews a lot less sweet than most, but still, “That’s the most humble fucking Korean meal. You’ve got your protein, you’ve got your pickled veggies, you got your carbs. That’s my ode to how I grew up eating at restaurants and at people’s homes. In the 80s, that’s what put us on the map. White people were like, ‘OK, we fuck with Korean food now.’”

I’m not sure what grandma can possibly dislike about his kimchi jjigae, stewed with his mom’s own home-fermented cabbage, but she will likely be conflicted: “She hates it when I use her food. She makes it specifically so that I eat it. But I think she also loves the idea of it feeding strangers.”

Does change make you nervous? Don’t sweat. There will be some Kimski classics, like the Ko-Po beef sandwich dressed with charred shishitos and smothered in cheddar sauce; and the dduk bbok ski, sweet and spicy rice cakes with muenster cheese and fried egg; and the soy-sesame sour cream-drenched fries with chili oil, nori, and scallions.

Just look at his mad skills, courtesy of Tony Trimm and the Home Feed Show:

https://chicagoreader.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/HF_E02_RAMEN_RIFT_WON_CUT-2.mp4

Don’t bring granny this Monday beginning at 5 PM at 4100 N. Kedzie. Just walk on in and order. No preorders necessary.

Meanwhile, there’s one more Foodball left in 2022, when veteran Schneider Provisions team up with Zeitlin’s Delicatessen on the first night of Hannukah, December 19. Keep your eyes open for a brand-new Foodball schedule in January.

Read More

Preview a brave new Kimski at the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon December 8, 2022 at 4:11 pm Read More »

3 insane trades that send Patrick Kane to the New York IslandersVincent Pariseon December 8, 2022 at 1:00 pm

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The Chicago Blackhawks are a very bad hockey team. After getting beat by the New Jersey Devils on Tuesday, they are 4-14-4 which is good for a three-way tie for second to last in the entire National Hockey League. This team had no chance against a Devils team that is loaded.

Now, they have to move forward knowing that they aren’t even close to the good teams and still lose a majority of the games against the bad teams. There is a good chance they are dead last in the whole league by the time December is over.

They need to make some changes. Patrick Kane must be traded. He is too good to be letting waste away like this. He has struggled to put up points while still playing well this season and it is mostly because he has no help around him.

If the team was to trade him, they would still be able to get a lot for him because of the fact that it is obvious that he will be so much better on a team that actually has a chance to win more games than they lose. The Blackhawks pretty much have no chance any night that they play.

The Chicago Blackhawks need to trade Patrick Kane as soon as they can.

Kane isn’t going to be great on a team that will lose eight out of nine games regularly. He deserves to have a chance at the playoffs and this team is a tier below non-playoff teams.

The New York Islanders would be a fantastic place for Kane to land. He’d get to live in New York and play on a team that has a chance to win. If a trade like that were to happen, it might look something like this:

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3 insane trades that send Patrick Kane to the New York IslandersVincent Pariseon December 8, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Nina Hagen’s pop-punk politics age Into awesomeness on the new Unity

Some aging rock legends make music that feels like a shadow of the early work that cemented their fame. Not Nina Hagen, though. On Unity (Grönland), her first album since 2011, the German pop-punk icon unleashes a blast of feral camp that sounds if anything more Hagen than ever. Her distinctive theatrical voice has roughened to an even more theatrical froglike croak; on her preposterous, reverb-laden cover of Merle Travis’s workers’ anthem “16 Tons” (whose video features a series of fabulously diverse queer-coded lip-synchers wearing variations of Hagen’s famously flamboyant makeup), she sounds like she’s gargling at the bottom of a mine shaft. On her German-language cover of Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind,” she somehow goes even further over the top, enunciating as if she’s in an opera against hyperactive synth wind effects. The original songs on Unity are great too; Hagen teams up with George Clinton for the insinuating funk of the title track, which interpolates the African American traditional “Wade in the Water” and incorporates the dial tone of a collect call from prison as a hook. Jamaican singer Liz Mitchel of Boney M. adds her mannered squeaks to Hagen’s mannered bellow on the feminist reggae anthem “United Women of the World.” The political messages of solidarity with workers, Black people, women, queer people, and victims of war are all so gloriously big and bloated that they go beyond corny and become transcendent, weird, counterintuitively hip schmaltz. When Hagen’s shouts of “Freedom!” echo away at the end of “Redemption Day,” they sound like liberation from the shackles of time, hate, and good taste alike. Unity is a joy.

Nina Hagen’s Unity is available through Grönland.

Read More

Nina Hagen’s pop-punk politics age Into awesomeness on the new Unity Read More »

Nina Hagen’s pop-punk politics age Into awesomeness on the new UnityNoah Berlatskyon December 8, 2022 at 12:00 pm

Some aging rock legends make music that feels like a shadow of the early work that cemented their fame. Not Nina Hagen, though. On Unity (Grönland), her first album since 2011, the German pop-punk icon unleashes a blast of feral camp that sounds if anything more Hagen than ever. Her distinctive theatrical voice has roughened to an even more theatrical froglike croak; on her preposterous, reverb-laden cover of Merle Travis’s workers’ anthem “16 Tons” (whose video features a series of fabulously diverse queer-coded lip-synchers wearing variations of Hagen’s famously flamboyant makeup), she sounds like she’s gargling at the bottom of a mine shaft. On her German-language cover of Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind,” she somehow goes even further over the top, enunciating as if she’s in an opera against hyperactive synth wind effects. The original songs on Unity are great too; Hagen teams up with George Clinton for the insinuating funk of the title track, which interpolates the African American traditional “Wade in the Water” and incorporates the dial tone of a collect call from prison as a hook. Jamaican singer Liz Mitchel of Boney M. adds her mannered squeaks to Hagen’s mannered bellow on the feminist reggae anthem “United Women of the World.” The political messages of solidarity with workers, Black people, women, queer people, and victims of war are all so gloriously big and bloated that they go beyond corny and become transcendent, weird, counterintuitively hip schmaltz. When Hagen’s shouts of “Freedom!” echo away at the end of “Redemption Day,” they sound like liberation from the shackles of time, hate, and good taste alike. Unity is a joy.

Nina Hagen’s Unity is available through Grönland.

Read More

Nina Hagen’s pop-punk politics age Into awesomeness on the new UnityNoah Berlatskyon December 8, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

3 sneaky trade-back scenarios for the Chicago Bears with the no. 2 pickRyan Heckmanon December 8, 2022 at 12:00 pm

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It has taken a few days for some fans to get over, but the Chicago Bears are moving past yet another loss to the Green Bay Packers.

Now, they enter their bye week with a record of 3-9 and are locked into the second overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft behind the Houston Texans at number one.

While there is a portion of fans that do not like to celebrate losses in a way that looks forward to the draft, there is certainly bliss in zeroing in on the future of this franchise rather than sulking in the current state of losses.

The 2023 draft class is going to be a pivotal one for the Bears and Ryan Poles, who will be in his second year as general manager. But, most would agree that if the Bears end up with that second overall pick, there’s no way they should stay there.

The Chicago Bears will have plenty of buyers for the second overall pick, but some sneaky options may present themselves.

The NFL Draft Order after Week 12 ? pic.twitter.com/BxE7MGK5mV

— PFF (@PFF) November 29, 2022

There are some obvious teams in the upper half of the draft who would want to trade up with the Bears to snag that second overall pick. Teams like the Las Vegas Raiders (currently the 12th pick), the Carolina Panthers (currently the 6th pick) and Detroit Lions (currently the 4th pick by way of the Rams) come to mind.

Maybe, even the Atlanta Falcons at number 10 would make a move.

But, if you look at some other teams out there, the Bears should have a wide array of trade partners; even some you may not expect to be active at first.

Right now, there are three teams that the Bears could trade with which may not be at the top of everyone’s guess list.

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3 sneaky trade-back scenarios for the Chicago Bears with the no. 2 pickRyan Heckmanon December 8, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Family styleIsa Giallorenzoon December 7, 2022 at 11:25 pm

Gábor Hizó, Alanna Zaritz, and their daughter Zel Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

Alanna Zaritz, 39, was born and raised in Chicago and is one of our city’s treasures. She is a familiar, welcoming, and eye-catching figure at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (MCA), where she has worked since 2005 (she’s currently the MCA’s store manager). 

Zaritz’s awe for her hometown is contagious, and very handy, since she has valuable local tips. Her love for fashion is obvious, as she approaches the art of dressing with devotion and expertise. “Fashion is alchemical and chameleonic. Not only does dressing up show regard for people you meet, it causes propulsive explosions of energy,” she says. 

“I’m always challenging my ideas about self-expression via fashion. My sense of self is wavy, and my closet is similarly all over the place. If only I was better at creating through visual art or music, but I’ve got this natural affinity for making color and texture combinations on my body. We love a flowy silhouette!” she adds. Zaritz’s style is influenced by the way she moves through space, and her job at the MCA. “It’s a super-inspiring place to be. From the ever-changing exhibits to my colleagues to the patrons to the building itself, to the freaking glorious force of nature Lake Michigan, which is just in our backyard, we are always being plied with ideas about who we are and who we can be and how we fit meaning into our existence,” she elaborates. 

On the day Zaritz was photographed, she was sporting a laundry list of fashion designers celebrated by those well-versed in the métier. “Sies Marjan faux astrakhan jacket in an unexpectedly delightful lilac, seafoam Craig Green quilted trousers, crystal Simone Rocha sandals, and iridescent Loeffler Randall purse. The idea is ‘Monet’s Water Lilies escapes the Art Institute.’ It’s all secondhand,” she says. 

Zaritz completed her ensemble with an iridescent Loeffler Randall purse. Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

Zaritz felt particularly proud of a humble yet powerful accessory: her “I Voted!” sticker. “Voting is the absolute minimum—less than the minimum. Vote and volunteer and do the research and be involved in your community,” she advocates. 

Zaritz found a match made in fashion heaven in designer Gábor Hizó, 35. “We’ve been together about ten years, but we were friends before that. Gábor was the first person who was never derisive regarding my interest in style and that, among his infinite wonderful qualities, was refreshing. I am always curious to see what he’ll put together. He’s got a great and mysterious inner fantasy. Also, he’s supportive of creative expression, whatever shape that may take, and not just for me and Zel [their eight-year-old daughter], but expansively. He’s a great collaborator,” Zaritz says. 

Since they wear the same size, Zaritz often shops Hizó’s closet, and they go on exciting thrifting trips together. “We traveled a lot this year and we thrifted in Palm Springs, Oakland, San Francisco, Seattle, and New Orleans. We buy and sell at Buffalo Exchange, Crossroads, Elliott Consignment, the Second Child, and the RealReal as well, plus Vestiaire Collective and eBay. We prefer pre-loved garments—paying retail is a scam!” asserts Zaritz. 

Hizó concurs. “I like secondhand resale shops and small boutiques,” he says. That day while strolling and voting with his family in Chinatown, he was going for “warmth, utility, and mobility.” 

“I am wearing a Craig Green quilted worker jacket, AllSaints wool slacks, Salomon trail running shoes, and a hat I picked up at City Lights in San Fran. I try to carry some kind of camera [a Fuji X-Pro1 for today] with me at all times as I am Zel’s number one paparazzo. I think the blue of the jacket is bizarre in the best way possible. It’s the color of the future,” he predicts. 

Zaritz, 39, found a match made in fashion heaven in designer Hizó, 35. Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

Hizó is the living example of how menswear can be fun, interesting, and boundless. “Try on everything. Prescribe to no size, trend, style, color, or gender,” he says. Hizó describes his style as “unconventional, but sensible, with lots of black and some pops of color.” He’s currently into big pockets, roomy fits, draping layers, ambiguity, and unusual silhouettes, and also “all the amazing utility-focused vintage clothing from the 80s and 90s by [Marithé et François Girbaud], Yohji [Yamamoto], and Issey Miyake that were as impressively forward-thinking then as they are today.” 

Their daughter Zel was wearing a lovely non-saccharine denim jumpsuit and Cookie Monster socks. “Zel’s outfit is also all secondhand, socks aside. Nununu jumpsuit and Timbs [Timberland boots]. Her crossbody bag was a gift from a cool friend,” says Zaritz. She advises parents to buy pre-owned garments and avoid disposable fashion: “Buy natural fibers that decompose and quality items that can be handed down repeatedly or resold. Mend and do repairs. Learn to sew and teach your kids to sew. Once you can darn your socks or patch a hole, you’ll never look at any garment the same way, much less a clothing store. Also, kids naturally gravitate towards fun and fantasy. Encourage that tendency,” she adds. 

With fashion in her DNA, Zel claims to love dresses, jumpsuits, and cool sweaters. Like her mother, she values movement. “I like to twirl in my dresses,” she says. And like her father, Zel values a bit of minimalism and graphic details: “I like simple clothing with shapes on it.”

This family’s love for art and fashion is only paralleled by their love of Chicago, and these Pilsen dwellers have a lot to share about the city. They are fascinated by Chinatown, and know many of the neighborhood’s nooks and crannies well. 

“We love the vast variety of restaurants, the park and the river, the library and landmarks, the cultural events, the people-watching. I frequently recommend taking the water taxi or river tour and getting some local perspective. Aji Ichiban, Tsaocaa, QXY, Veggie House, Hello Jasmine, and Tous Les Jours are some of our favorites. (Tous Les Jours is South Korean, not French; don’t let the name fool you.) I’ve been going to Joy Yee since I was 11. Chinatown is a perpetual vibe,” says Zaritz. 

“We are regularly enticed by the idea of bubble tea, Hong Kong-style waffles, and snacks from Aji Ichiban. The sweeter things in life! Thankfully it’s a quick jaunt over from Pilsen,” says Hizó. “A fun summer move is grabbing cold beverages from Chinatown, then taking the water taxi that stops in Ping Tom Park toward downtown for an unofficial architectural tour of the city. Chicago was built to be seen from the river, and it always seizes me,” he adds.

Street View 161: Street-style heaven at Beauty Bar

Isa Giallorenzo’s Street View 161

Street View 080: Alanna hits a high note at the opera

Isa Giallorenzo’s Street View 080

Pitchfork experience: Book Fort [PHOTOS]

GlitterGuts’ photographers and cofounders Sarah Joyce and Eric Strom set up an impromptu studio in Pitchfork’s Book Fort to capture portraits of the authors, readers, and festivalgoers passing through. Book Fort at Pitchfork 2018

Read More

Family styleIsa Giallorenzoon December 7, 2022 at 11:25 pm Read More »

Family style

Gábor Hizó, Alanna Zaritz, and their daughter Zel Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

Alanna Zaritz, 39, was born and raised in Chicago and is one of our city’s treasures. She is a familiar, welcoming, and eye-catching figure at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (MCA), where she has worked since 2005 (she’s currently the MCA’s store manager). 

Zaritz’s awe for her hometown is contagious, and very handy, since she has valuable local tips. Her love for fashion is obvious, as she approaches the art of dressing with devotion and expertise. “Fashion is alchemical and chameleonic. Not only does dressing up show regard for people you meet, it causes propulsive explosions of energy,” she says. 

“I’m always challenging my ideas about self-expression via fashion. My sense of self is wavy, and my closet is similarly all over the place. If only I was better at creating through visual art or music, but I’ve got this natural affinity for making color and texture combinations on my body. We love a flowy silhouette!” she adds. Zaritz’s style is influenced by the way she moves through space, and her job at the MCA. “It’s a super-inspiring place to be. From the ever-changing exhibits to my colleagues to the patrons to the building itself, to the freaking glorious force of nature Lake Michigan, which is just in our backyard, we are always being plied with ideas about who we are and who we can be and how we fit meaning into our existence,” she elaborates. 

On the day Zaritz was photographed, she was sporting a laundry list of fashion designers celebrated by those well-versed in the métier. “Sies Marjan faux astrakhan jacket in an unexpectedly delightful lilac, seafoam Craig Green quilted trousers, crystal Simone Rocha sandals, and iridescent Loeffler Randall purse. The idea is ‘Monet’s Water Lilies escapes the Art Institute.’ It’s all secondhand,” she says. 

Zaritz completed her ensemble with an iridescent Loeffler Randall purse. Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

Zaritz felt particularly proud of a humble yet powerful accessory: her “I Voted!” sticker. “Voting is the absolute minimum—less than the minimum. Vote and volunteer and do the research and be involved in your community,” she advocates. 

Zaritz found a match made in fashion heaven in designer Gábor Hizó, 35. “We’ve been together about ten years, but we were friends before that. Gábor was the first person who was never derisive regarding my interest in style and that, among his infinite wonderful qualities, was refreshing. I am always curious to see what he’ll put together. He’s got a great and mysterious inner fantasy. Also, he’s supportive of creative expression, whatever shape that may take, and not just for me and Zel [their eight-year-old daughter], but expansively. He’s a great collaborator,” Zaritz says. 

Since they wear the same size, Zaritz often shops Hizó’s closet, and they go on exciting thrifting trips together. “We traveled a lot this year and we thrifted in Palm Springs, Oakland, San Francisco, Seattle, and New Orleans. We buy and sell at Buffalo Exchange, Crossroads, Elliott Consignment, the Second Child, and the RealReal as well, plus Vestiaire Collective and eBay. We prefer pre-loved garments—paying retail is a scam!” asserts Zaritz. 

Hizó concurs. “I like secondhand resale shops and small boutiques,” he says. That day while strolling and voting with his family in Chinatown, he was going for “warmth, utility, and mobility.” 

“I am wearing a Craig Green quilted worker jacket, AllSaints wool slacks, Salomon trail running shoes, and a hat I picked up at City Lights in San Fran. I try to carry some kind of camera [a Fuji X-Pro1 for today] with me at all times as I am Zel’s number one paparazzo. I think the blue of the jacket is bizarre in the best way possible. It’s the color of the future,” he predicts. 

Zaritz, 39, found a match made in fashion heaven in designer Hizó, 35. Credit: Isa Giallorenzo

Hizó is the living example of how menswear can be fun, interesting, and boundless. “Try on everything. Prescribe to no size, trend, style, color, or gender,” he says. Hizó describes his style as “unconventional, but sensible, with lots of black and some pops of color.” He’s currently into big pockets, roomy fits, draping layers, ambiguity, and unusual silhouettes, and also “all the amazing utility-focused vintage clothing from the 80s and 90s by [Marithé et François Girbaud], Yohji [Yamamoto], and Issey Miyake that were as impressively forward-thinking then as they are today.” 

Their daughter Zel was wearing a lovely non-saccharine denim jumpsuit and Cookie Monster socks. “Zel’s outfit is also all secondhand, socks aside. Nununu jumpsuit and Timbs [Timberland boots]. Her crossbody bag was a gift from a cool friend,” says Zaritz. She advises parents to buy pre-owned garments and avoid disposable fashion: “Buy natural fibers that decompose and quality items that can be handed down repeatedly or resold. Mend and do repairs. Learn to sew and teach your kids to sew. Once you can darn your socks or patch a hole, you’ll never look at any garment the same way, much less a clothing store. Also, kids naturally gravitate towards fun and fantasy. Encourage that tendency,” she adds. 

With fashion in her DNA, Zel claims to love dresses, jumpsuits, and cool sweaters. Like her mother, she values movement. “I like to twirl in my dresses,” she says. And like her father, Zel values a bit of minimalism and graphic details: “I like simple clothing with shapes on it.”

This family’s love for art and fashion is only paralleled by their love of Chicago, and these Pilsen dwellers have a lot to share about the city. They are fascinated by Chinatown, and know many of the neighborhood’s nooks and crannies well. 

“We love the vast variety of restaurants, the park and the river, the library and landmarks, the cultural events, the people-watching. I frequently recommend taking the water taxi or river tour and getting some local perspective. Aji Ichiban, Tsaocaa, QXY, Veggie House, Hello Jasmine, and Tous Les Jours are some of our favorites. (Tous Les Jours is South Korean, not French; don’t let the name fool you.) I’ve been going to Joy Yee since I was 11. Chinatown is a perpetual vibe,” says Zaritz. 

“We are regularly enticed by the idea of bubble tea, Hong Kong-style waffles, and snacks from Aji Ichiban. The sweeter things in life! Thankfully it’s a quick jaunt over from Pilsen,” says Hizó. “A fun summer move is grabbing cold beverages from Chinatown, then taking the water taxi that stops in Ping Tom Park toward downtown for an unofficial architectural tour of the city. Chicago was built to be seen from the river, and it always seizes me,” he adds.

Street View 161: Street-style heaven at Beauty Bar

Isa Giallorenzo’s Street View 161

Street View 080: Alanna hits a high note at the opera

Isa Giallorenzo’s Street View 080

Pitchfork experience: Book Fort [PHOTOS]

GlitterGuts’ photographers and cofounders Sarah Joyce and Eric Strom set up an impromptu studio in Pitchfork’s Book Fort to capture portraits of the authors, readers, and festivalgoers passing through. Book Fort at Pitchfork 2018

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