What’s New

Editor’s note: I remember

Vol. 52, No. 4 Credit: On the cover: Photo by Aarij Abbas

The who’s who of local journalism gathered recently at the Newberry Library for the 83rd annual Chicago Journalists Association awards. As the organization’s first in-person ceremony since the pandemic took its grip, a buoyant feeling was in the air (aided perhaps by an open bar), as Chicago journalists rocked their finest duds (props to Sun-Times columnist Ismael Pérez for outshining us all), and took a beat to look back at their work across the past year—and its resulting community impact.

The night was an extra special one for the Reader, as publisher Tracy Baim received a Lifetime Achievement award, and our own Kelly Garcia was chosen as the Emerging Journalist of the Year. If that weren’t enough, staffers Katie Prout and Mike Sula were nominated for Sarah Brown Boyden awards, and freelance contributor Matthew Ritchie took home a first place distinction. 

During the pre-awards mixer, Reader managing editor Salem Collo-Julin asked if I’d picked up an index card and written down a query for Baim’s Q&A session. I’m not sure if it was the free-flowing bourbon, but for some unexplained reason, I brushed it off as a joke.

The ceremony underway, Baim was called to the lectern, and the emcee mentioned that in lieu of a stuffy speech, the honoree had decided to have an informal chat featuring questions from the audience. Panic set in. My boss was about to take the mike, and she might not be able to fill her allotted space. I needed to do something. Swiftly, I pulled out my phone and looked up “Windy City Times,” the storied LGBTQ+ publication Baim launched alongside Drew Badanish, Bob Bearden, and Jeff McCourt, and that’s when I saw it: Founded 1985.

I immediately felt a knot in my stomach, as even as a schoolboy, I remembered the significance of that time, and what it meant in the queer world I would one day grow up to be a part of: the early days of the AIDS epidemic.

Tracy Baim and Enrique Limón Credit: GlitterGuts

Gladly, Tracy is a talker, and didn’t need my help filling up time thanks to her extensive mental Rolodex of experiences, including interviewing Mayor Harold Washington, and taking him to task on the city’s poor economic response to the nascent health crisis. 

Still, for a moment that seemed eternal, I dissociated, remembered being in Catholic school and having the nuns show us a news report mentioning this new condition, which they packaged as God’s welcomed punishment. At that moment, not having experienced my first crush, long division, or having even shaved for the first time, I remember thinking, I know what I’m going to die of. Moreover, I knew that no one would come to my funeral, and that my sole existence would be my family’s forever shame. That’s a lot for a grade schooler to take in. 

Anyone who has ever taken a rapid HIV test knows how mortifying those 20 minutes between being swabbed and getting your results can be. Imagine prolonging that over two weeks, which was the norm at the time, way before pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) was a glimmer in science’s eye; when the White House press secretary used the syndrome as a punchline during a briefing; and when, as one poignant scene in a sitcom of the time put it, it was believed AIDS was “killing all the right people.”

The scene in question, from the second season of the sitcom Designing Women, first aired on October 5, 1987

The LGBTQ+ community desperately needed allies in those primordial days, and the “L” in the acronym stood hand in hand with their brethren. They organized, marched, rallied, screamed, and fought like hell. Baim did all that while informing, dispelling misinformation, pairing a human face to the crisis, and saving lives along the way. She won’t want to hear this, but I say give her all the awards.

Ahead of Thursday, December 1, World AIDS Day—a commemoration that started in 1988 as the first-ever global health day—it’s worth noting that HIV, the virus that causes AIDS if left untreated, is now a manageable condition with multiple treatment options, and that while the threat of infection seems like something for the history books, the World Health Organization estimates that 650,000 people died from HIV-related causes globally last year alone, adding to the more than 40 million worldwide deaths since virologists first classified it.

AIDS, and the stigma it carried, robbed the world of a whole generation of artists, thinkers, performers, storytellers, and everyday folk who hid their true identities till the end because the world around them wasn’t ready to hear it, let alone accept it. To them I say I remember, and I thank you for being at the forefront. I, and many others, are indebted to you for paving the way, for taking the brunt of this epidemic, and for bringing exposure to a community that had long become used to living in the shadows. I also say thanks for allowing yourself to love when chances are that, like me, you were conditioned at a young age to think you’d never be worthy of it. Thank you from that little boy who was not able to properly word it, and would pray at night for God to make him “normal.” Thank you from the adult who still prays, and now gives thanks for every single thing that makes him unique, and asks for a more compassionate and caring world—one where our mere existence isn’t an open invitation for banishment, derision, or violence.

I remember.


What Paul Moses Taught

Mike Moses never knew his father, Paul Bell Moses. For the most part, he was afraid to ask about him.  He knew about his father’s remarkable life in broad strokes. For example, he knew Moses—the first Black student admitted to Haverford College, a protege of the eminent art collector Albert Barnes, and later a scholar…


Chicago band the O’My’s make effortless, magical soul

The O’My’s sound like a band reincarnated from generations ago, as if they were dreamed up by a kid who knows too much about their grandparents’ past. How do they do it? Wisdom, skill, poise, restraint, and hazy fun pepper their music and demeanor. Their members may have been born after the “boomer” generation, but…


Special Interest infuse punk and disco with hard-hitting social themes

New Orleans punk band Special Interest have been blowing wigs back since 2018, when they dropped their debut record, Spiraling, a chaotic romp through hard-hitting social themes and wildly divergent musical directions. On “Young, Gifted, Black, in Leather” the sentiment is self-explanatory, yet the mighty wails of vocalist Alli Logout peel back new layers of…


The Gilgamanians and Maku Sica celebrate new records from distant points on the spectrum of improvisation

The Gilgamanians and Maku Sica (formerly Mako Sica) sound profoundly different from each other, but these two local ensembles share a commitment to using improvisation to tap into ideas they would never find any other way. The Gilgamanians are percussionist Michael Zerang and shortwave-radio operator Don Meckley. This is the duo’s first concert, but their…


Matches

MJM 52 seeks . . .


Classifieds

Help wanted/employment/job listings and classified listings for professional services, research, and adult services.


Celebrate Andersonville’s eclectic independent businesses community this holiday season

Held on the first Saturday after Thanksgiving (this year November 26), Small Business Saturday celebrates independent business owners during the bustling holiday season. Shopping local is an easy way for anyone to support independent businesses and help neighborhoods thrive, and in Chicago, one of the best places to get in on the fun is Andersonville.…


Chicago Reader Nonprofit Guide 2022

A joint project with Executive Service Corps, this guide includes 501(c)(3) nonprofits, fiscally sponsored grassroots, arts, media, and other organizations, and some social enterprises.


Arts & Culture

Chicago Reader Nonprofit Guide: A joint project with Executive Service Corps


The accidental TikTok star

Sonny had spent years making music for an audience of himself when he began to understand that other people liked it too. The Chicago rapper can pinpoint a few key moments: At a party he went to in 2019, the crowd was dead, and his manager at the time commandeered the sound system to throw…


Long COVID for the arts

Theatre Communications Group, the national organization for nonprofit theater, is about to release its latest annual report on the fiscal health of the field, Theatre Facts 2021. (Yes, it’s almost 2023, but this stuff takes time to collect.) The news is not great. The report, which compares results over a five-year period, tracks the startling…


Alt Economy offers mutually aided instruction for hospitality workers

Taylor Hanna taught herself to cook on the job. “I don’t have formal training,” says the 17-year veteran of nine restaurant kitchen lines, and one half of the pickling power duo Vargo Brother Ferments. “Chefs would give me tasks to do and I wouldn’t know what they were talking about. I’d go into the walk-in…


Elder explore individual journeys through their proggy new album, Innate Passage

When Elder emerged in Massachusetts in the mid-2000s, they worshiped at the altar of stoner-doom heavyweights such as Sleep and Eyehategod. But in the years since, they’ve emerged from behind the weed to establish a voice of their own. By their fifth LP, 2020’s Omens, most of the band had relocated to Berlin, and as…


Mosque4Mosque upends stereotypes

Mosque4Mosque is not a monolithic representation of the Arab American Muslim experience, and perhaps that’s exactly the point.  Written by Omer Abbas Salem and directed by Sophiyaa Nayar, this charming production challenges all preconceived notions of a play about an Arab American Muslim family.  In this sitcom-esque dramedy, Ibrahim (played by Salem) and his family…


Apartheid and Antigone

Exquisitely paced and intellectually explosive, The Island at Court Theatre is a profoundly moving work of art. From the first moment, this production (directed by Gabrielle Randle-Bent, Court’s associate artistic director) seizes the audience and thrusts them into the world of two political prisoners of apartheid and doesn’t let go, even long after the play…


A Steadfast seasonal favorite

It begins festively enough with a giant advent calendar revealing hints of the story to come. Some symbols are cheering, like wreaths and a violin. But others are mysterious—why a giant fish and a wheelbarrow?  In The Steadfast Tin Soldier, created and directed by Mary Zimmerman (from the story by Hans Christian Andersen), we soon…


Elf off the shelf

Like much that passes for entertainment during the holiday season, this 2010 musical, based on the 2003 movie, lives on the infinitely thin line between charm and utter stupidity. The characters are all derived from earlier entertainments and holiday advertising—jolly old Santa Claus, his myriad elf slaves, the sweet naif who believes in “the spirit…


A mixed quartet

Theatre Above the Law’s sampler platter of four one-acts from the late 19th and early 20th centuries (most of them seldom produced) offers mixed results. The opening piece, A Dollar by Yiddish playwright David Pinski, feels like an extended acting exercise in which archetypes (the Comedian, the Villain, the Ingenue, etc.) fight over the titular…


What’s new, pussy cat?

At 25 years old, The Lion King has been seen by more than 110 million people and played every continent but Antarctica. Between global warming and ticket demand, it’s probably just a matter of time.  The latest U.S. tour to stop in Chicago feels significantly less lavish from earlier versions that blew audiences and critics…


Kartemquin Films continues to grow

About the decision to hire Amir George, Gordon Quinn explains, “We really wanted someone we felt was going to help transform us into what the next iteration of Kartemquin would be.”


Our bodies, but whose choice?

It was around 2010 that writer-actor-director Julie Proudfoot was sitting in a Starbucks at the IC station downtown, waiting for the South Shore line to take her home, when she became aware of two young couples sitting at an adjacent table. “And the males were not only saying sexist things to the young women,” Proudfoot…


The MCA Store helps Chicagoans give the gift of art this holiday season

The Museum of Contemporary Art is synonymous with joy and expression. But some people don’t realize that, along with being one of Chicago’s top cultural destinations for its expansive galleries, cutting-edge exhibits, and carefully curated events, it’s an excellent place to find the perfect gift for the creative spirits and art lovers in your life.…


Philadelphia band They Are Gutting a Body of Water keep shoegaze weird on Lucky Styles

While on tour in 2018, I played a show in a dusty Philadelphia warehouse with locals They Are Gutting a Body of Water, a ragtag four-piece of young shoegaze revivalists. They really connected with me: they looked awkward and out of place, and they played beat-up old gear, but they put so much heart and…


Erica Mei Gamble releases a set of minimalist beats and electronics four years in the making

Erica Mei Gamble has been a key part of Chicago’s DIY experimental- and dance-music communities for more than a decade. She has several musical projects—including Sarica, A+E, and her S&M-themed goth horror duo with Sarah Leitten, Dungeon Mother—and she’s also the scene’s most diligent video preservationist. Gamble has posted sets by hundreds of artists dating…


Rethinking equity in the built environment

The house next door to mine was torn down. My neighbors don’t quite remember the year, but the resident local historian, Maurice, who has lived on the block since the late 60s, was shipped off to Vietnam and, upon his return in 1972, the house had vanished. The product of “slum clearance” on Chicago’s west…


Bad Animal captures Chicago’s glimmering indie music scene

Bad Animal feels like the natural progression for their fledgling production company [Emulsion Lab], marrying the indie music locus that inspired their start with the drive for creating projects that rival the scale of their DIY counterparts. 


TheMIND celebrates the deluxe version of Don’t Let It Go to Your Head with his first Chicago headlining gig

Chicago singer and producer Zarif Wilder, aka theMIND, has lent his gilded vocals and carefully crafted instrumentals to more hip-hop and R&B releases than I could possibly list here. He’s worked with practically every important rapper to emerge from the city in the past decade, including the three in the supergroup Ghetto Sage: Smino, Noname,…


Support local veterans with your purchase of Illinois Lottery’s Winter Winnings specialty ticket

In 2006 the Illinois Lottery launched the first Instant Lottery ticket in the country that designated 100 percent of its profits toward organizations that support veterans in Illinois. Working with the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs, the Illinois Lottery has raised over $20 million to fund the Veterans Cash program that has awarded grants to…


The Florida strategy

Poor Darren Bailey. The Chicago City Wire, the so-called newspaper intended to scare people like me into voting for him, arrived on Election Day, a week after I’d already voted early for someone else. Blame it on the U.S. Postal Service, Senator Bailey. In fact, I was paging through the City Wire while the results…


Walter Jagiello defined the polka sound of Polish Chicago

I’m part Polish, but in 18 years of the Secret History of Chicago Music, I’ve somehow never covered a polka musician. By certain generous estimates, around 1,900,000 people of Polish descent live in the Chicago metropolitan area—it’s the largest such community in the United States and the second worldwide only to Warsaw. Polka originated in…


Rest in power to Meta Mo of Rubberoom

In the early 90s, Chicago hip-hop first began making waves around the country. Several local acts put out albums on national labels in 1992: Smash Records released Ten Tray’s Realm of Darkness, Loud Records dropped Tung Twista’s Runnin’ Off at da Mouth, and Relativity issued Common Sense’s Can I Borrow a Dollar? That same year,…

Read More

Editor’s note: I remember Read More »

Laos to Your House goes live at the next Monday Night Foodball

Each week “Lucky” and “Pam” Seuamsothabandith walked the floor of the Seaford Clothing factory in Rock Island, Illinois, taking egg roll orders. The plant, which once famously made suits for Barack Obama, was where the couple (Phiengvilay and Phengphanh, respectively) found work after fleeing Laos in the late 70s.

When she was a kid, Stacy Seuamsothabandith woke up at 4 AM each Friday to the sizzle of her parents’ side hustle. “My mom was constantly working,” she says. “It was a nine-hour day in a really hot factory, then coming home to make a hot meal. I would sit down at the kitchen table with her to get two minutes with my mom first thing in the morning. She would always fry me a couple of egg rolls and I would go back to bed.”

Pam’s egg rolls. Credit: Laos to Your House

Pam passed away seven years ago, and the Seaford factory now sits empty, but her egg rolls live on in the family’s Lucky’s Eggrolls food truck, sustaining Quad Cities farmers’ market strollers and late-night bar goers since the late 90s. They arrived here in Chicago last June, when Stacy, her brother chef Keo Seuamsothabandith, and husband Byron Gully launched Laos to Your House, a biweekly virtual restaurant that reps Chicago’s only Lao food.

And now, on December 5, Laos to Your House is cooking live at Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up at the Kedzie Inn in Irving Park. Over the decades Chicago has had only rare opportunities to taste Lao food made to order, and though Pam’s egg rolls are now legendary, they only scratch the surface of this undersung Southeast Asian cuisine.

The LtYH crew will emerge from their new HQ at The Hatchery to assemble their signature Lao Bento Boxes and Laocuterie boards, featuring an assortment of grilled meats (brisket, sausage, chicken wings), sauces, and sticky rice; plus kua mee, sweet, caramelized wok fried rice noodles with pork and fresh herbs; nam khao, a crispy rice salad with tangy fermented pork, coconut, and red curry; and of course, Pam and Lucky’s beef egg rolls.

They’re also featuring a trio of specials you won’t typically find on their regular menus: the yellow chicken and potato curry gang garee gai, with a side of French bread to soak it all up; goong hom pha, whole shrimp swaddled in wontons and deep fried; and gingery sweet or spicy chicken wings.

“Keo, he learned to cook from Stacy’s mom,” says Gully. “She always wanted to have a restaurant, so every time we cook in that kitchen, it really feels like a tribute to her.”

There’ll be a limited number of walk-in orders available, so place your preorder right now. It all goes down beginning at 5 PM, Monday, December 5 at 4100 N. Kedzie.

Meanwhile check out the remaining Foodballs on the 2022 schedule below. New 2023 lineup coming soon.

Phengphanh “Pam” Seuamsothabandith and Phiengvilay “Lucky” Seuamsothabandith on their wedding day, Laos, 1975

December 12: Kimski rumspringa with Won Kim @revisecmw

December 19: First night of Hanukkah with Zeitlin’s Delicatessen and Schneider Provisions @zeitlinsdelicatessen @schneider_provisions

Read More

Laos to Your House goes live at the next Monday Night Foodball Read More »

Jack Off the Beanstalk at PrideArts, Natasha Leggero, and more

PrideArts’ Jack Off the Beanstalk Credit: John Olson/PrideArts

The Evolved Network is a recently established not for profit organization founded by Sebastian White in order to bring therapeutic services and financial literacy to young Chicagoans through farming and culinary training. The organization is currently raising funds that will go in part toward a permanent space in which to host its restaurant management and cooking programs, and tonight’s Eat & Evolve with the Evolved Network event at the Avondale restaurant Eden (2734 W. Roscoe) will hopefully help fill the coffers. Food stations will be available from a variety of Chicago restaurants and chef pop-ups, including Saigon Sisters, the Publican, and Prairie Grass Cafe, and cocktails and mocktails alike are offered from Eden’s cash bar. It’s $20 to enter, and tickets can be purchased through the Evolved Network’s website. (SCJ)

In Great Britain, the Christmas pantomime, or “panto,” is a beloved tradition (and no, it doesn’t involve actual mimes). PrideArts gets in on the Fractured Fairy Tales-style fun with Jack Off the Beanstalk, which has its first preview tonight at 7:30 PM at PrideArts Center (4139 N. Broadway). The famous climber of beanstalks and slayer of giants is joined in this romp by love interest Princess Jill and Fairy Flick Bean. Directed by Bryan McCaffrey, the show is recommended for 18+, and promises “outrageous humor, raunchy puns, and sexual innuendo,” along with pop songs made famous by artists like Kelly Clarkson and Whitney Houston performed by the cast and a live four-piece band. The show runs through 12/18; tickets and information at pridearts.org. (KR)

A few music choices for this evening:

Chicago singer-songwriter Owen Ashworth’s project Advance Base plays Beat Kitchen tonight, with MJ Lenderman and Spencer Radcliffe opening. (8 PM, 2100 W. Belmont, $18, 17+, tickets at Ticketweb)
Indie-rock band Wild Pink performs at Sleeping Village tonight, with Dave Benton’s Trace Mountains project opening. (8 PM, 3734 W. Belmont, $22, 21+, tickets at Etix)
Bassist Jeremiah Hunt brings his Mingus Band to Jazz Showcase tonight for two shows. (8 and 10 PM, 806 S. Plymouth, $15-$25, all-ages, tickets at Eventbrite)
Chicago dream pop band Harvey Waters is on the bill for Free Monday at the Empty Bottle; Bled Tape headlines as the show is also their EP release party, and Stalled opens. (8:30 PM, 1035 N. Western, free, 21+, reservations encouraged at Eventbrite) (SCJ)
Part of a Kristen Toomey set at the Laugh Factory from October 2022

Rockford native and Illinois State University alum Natasha Leggero visits City Winery (1200 W. Randolph) tonight for a round of stand-up and stories culled from her new book, The World Deserves My Children, a collection of essays on motherhood and family in our “post-apocalyptic world.” She’ll be joined by fellow actress and Chicago comedian Kristen Toomey, who will open the 8 PM show. Tickets are $18-$37 and available at the City Winery’s website. (SCJ)

Read More

Jack Off the Beanstalk at PrideArts, Natasha Leggero, and more Read More »

Laos to Your House goes live at the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon November 28, 2022 at 10:05 pm

Each week “Lucky” and “Pam” Seuamsothabandith walked the floor of the Seaford Clothing factory in Rock Island, Illinois, taking egg roll orders. The plant, which once famously made suits for Barack Obama, was where the couple (Phiengvilay and Phengphanh, respectively) found work after fleeing Laos in the late 70s.

When she was a kid, Stacy Seuamsothabandith woke up at 4 AM each Friday to the sizzle of her parents’ side hustle. “My mom was constantly working,” she says. “It was a nine-hour day in a really hot factory, then coming home to make a hot meal. I would sit down at the kitchen table with her to get two minutes with my mom first thing in the morning. She would always fry me a couple of egg rolls and I would go back to bed.”

Pam’s egg rolls. Credit: Laos to Your House

Pam passed away seven years ago, and the Seaford factory now sits empty, but her egg rolls live on in the family’s Lucky’s Eggrolls food truck, sustaining Quad Cities farmers’ market strollers and late-night bar goers since the late 90s. They arrived here in Chicago last June, when Stacy, her brother chef Keo Seuamsothabandith, and husband Byron Gully launched Laos to Your House, a biweekly virtual restaurant that reps Chicago’s only Lao food.

And now, on December 5, Laos to Your House is cooking live at Monday Night Foodball, the Reader’s weekly chef pop-up at the Kedzie Inn in Irving Park. Over the decades Chicago has had only rare opportunities to taste Lao food made to order, and though Pam’s egg rolls are now legendary, they only scratch the surface of this undersung Southeast Asian cuisine.

The LtYH crew will emerge from their new HQ at The Hatchery to assemble their signature Lao Bento Boxes and Laocuterie boards, featuring an assortment of grilled meats (brisket, sausage, chicken wings), sauces, and sticky rice; plus kua mee, sweet, caramelized wok fried rice noodles with pork and fresh herbs; nam khao, a crispy rice salad with tangy fermented pork, coconut, and red curry; and of course, Pam and Lucky’s beef egg rolls.

They’re also featuring a trio of specials you won’t typically find on their regular menus: the yellow chicken and potato curry gang garee gai, with a side of French bread to soak it all up; goong hom pha, whole shrimp swaddled in wontons and deep fried; and gingery sweet or spicy chicken wings.

“Keo, he learned to cook from Stacy’s mom,” says Gully. “She always wanted to have a restaurant, so every time we cook in that kitchen, it really feels like a tribute to her.”

There’ll be a limited number of walk-in orders available, so place your preorder right now. It all goes down beginning at 5 PM, Monday, December 5 at 4100 N. Kedzie.

Meanwhile check out the remaining Foodballs on the 2022 schedule below. New 2023 lineup coming soon.

Phengphanh “Pam” Seuamsothabandith and Phiengvilay “Lucky” Seuamsothabandith on their wedding day, Laos, 1975

December 12: Kimski rumspringa with Won Kim @revisecmw

December 19: First night of Hanukkah with Zeitlin’s Delicatessen and Schneider Provisions @zeitlinsdelicatessen @schneider_provisions

Read More

Laos to Your House goes live at the next Monday Night FoodballMike Sulaon November 28, 2022 at 10:05 pm Read More »

Jack Off the Beanstalk at PrideArts, Natasha Leggero, and moreKerry Reid and Salem Collo-Julinon November 28, 2022 at 10:09 pm

PrideArts’ Jack Off the Beanstalk Credit: John Olson/PrideArts

The Evolved Network is a recently established not for profit organization founded by Sebastian White in order to bring therapeutic services and financial literacy to young Chicagoans through farming and culinary training. The organization is currently raising funds that will go in part toward a permanent space in which to host its restaurant management and cooking programs, and tonight’s Eat & Evolve with the Evolved Network event at the Avondale restaurant Eden (2734 W. Roscoe) will hopefully help fill the coffers. Food stations will be available from a variety of Chicago restaurants and chef pop-ups, including Saigon Sisters, the Publican, and Prairie Grass Cafe, and cocktails and mocktails alike are offered from Eden’s cash bar. It’s $20 to enter, and tickets can be purchased through the Evolved Network’s website. (SCJ)

In Great Britain, the Christmas pantomime, or “panto,” is a beloved tradition (and no, it doesn’t involve actual mimes). PrideArts gets in on the Fractured Fairy Tales-style fun with Jack Off the Beanstalk, which has its first preview tonight at 7:30 PM at PrideArts Center (4139 N. Broadway). The famous climber of beanstalks and slayer of giants is joined in this romp by love interest Princess Jill and Fairy Flick Bean. Directed by Bryan McCaffrey, the show is recommended for 18+, and promises “outrageous humor, raunchy puns, and sexual innuendo,” along with pop songs made famous by artists like Kelly Clarkson and Whitney Houston performed by the cast and a live four-piece band. The show runs through 12/18; tickets and information at pridearts.org. (KR)

A few music choices for this evening:

Chicago singer-songwriter Owen Ashworth’s project Advance Base plays Beat Kitchen tonight, with MJ Lenderman and Spencer Radcliffe opening. (8 PM, 2100 W. Belmont, $18, 17+, tickets at Ticketweb)
Indie-rock band Wild Pink performs at Sleeping Village tonight, with Dave Benton’s Trace Mountains project opening. (8 PM, 3734 W. Belmont, $22, 21+, tickets at Etix)
Bassist Jeremiah Hunt brings his Mingus Band to Jazz Showcase tonight for two shows. (8 and 10 PM, 806 S. Plymouth, $15-$25, all-ages, tickets at Eventbrite)
Chicago dream pop band Harvey Waters is on the bill for Free Monday at the Empty Bottle; Bled Tape headlines as the show is also their EP release party, and Stalled opens. (8:30 PM, 1035 N. Western, free, 21+, reservations encouraged at Eventbrite) (SCJ)
Part of a Kristen Toomey set at the Laugh Factory from October 2022

Rockford native and Illinois State University alum Natasha Leggero visits City Winery (1200 W. Randolph) tonight for a round of stand-up and stories culled from her new book, The World Deserves My Children, a collection of essays on motherhood and family in our “post-apocalyptic world.” She’ll be joined by fellow actress and Chicago comedian Kristen Toomey, who will open the 8 PM show. Tickets are $18-$37 and available at the City Winery’s website. (SCJ)

Read More

Jack Off the Beanstalk at PrideArts, Natasha Leggero, and moreKerry Reid and Salem Collo-Julinon November 28, 2022 at 10:09 pm Read More »

Editor’s note: I rememberEnrique Limónon November 28, 2022 at 11:08 pm

Vol. 52, No. 4 Credit: On the cover: Photo by Aarij Abbas

The who’s who of local journalism gathered recently at the Newberry Library for the 83rd annual Chicago Journalists Association awards. As the organization’s first in-person ceremony since the pandemic took its grip, a buoyant feeling was in the air (aided perhaps by an open bar), as Chicago journalists rocked their finest duds (props to Sun-Times columnist Ismael Pérez for outshining us all), and took a beat to look back at their work across the past year—and its resulting community impact.

The night was an extra special one for the Reader, as publisher Tracy Baim received a Lifetime Achievement award, and our own Kelly Garcia was chosen as the Emerging Journalist of the Year. If that weren’t enough, staffers Katie Prout and Mike Sula were nominated for Sarah Brown Boyden awards, and freelance contributor Matthew Ritchie took home a first place distinction. 

During the pre-awards mixer, Reader managing editor Salem Collo-Julin asked if I’d picked up an index card and written down a query for Baim’s Q&A session. I’m not sure if it was the free-flowing bourbon, but for some unexplained reason, I brushed it off as a joke.

The ceremony underway, Baim was called to the lectern, and the emcee mentioned that in lieu of a stuffy speech, the honoree had decided to have an informal chat featuring questions from the audience. Panic set in. My boss was about to take the mike, and she might not be able to fill her allotted space. I needed to do something. Swiftly, I pulled out my phone and looked up “Windy City Times,” the storied LGBTQ+ publication Baim launched alongside Drew Badanish, Bob Bearden, and Jeff McCourt, and that’s when I saw it: Founded 1985.

I immediately felt a knot in my stomach, as even as a schoolboy, I remembered the significance of that time, and what it meant in the queer world I would one day grow up to be a part of: the early days of the AIDS epidemic.

Tracy Baim and Enrique Limón Credit: GlitterGuts

Gladly, Tracy is a talker, and didn’t need my help filling up time thanks to her extensive mental Rolodex of experiences, including interviewing Mayor Harold Washington, and taking him to task on the city’s poor economic response to the nascent health crisis. 

Still, for a moment that seemed eternal, I dissociated, remembered being in Catholic school and having the nuns show us a news report mentioning this new condition, which they packaged as God’s welcomed punishment. At that moment, not having experienced my first crush, long division, or having even shaved for the first time, I remember thinking, I know what I’m going to die of. Moreover, I knew that no one would come to my funeral, and that my sole existence would be my family’s forever shame. That’s a lot for a grade schooler to take in. 

Anyone who has ever taken a rapid HIV test knows how mortifying those 20 minutes between being swabbed and getting your results can be. Imagine prolonging that over two weeks, which was the norm at the time, way before pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) was a glimmer in science’s eye; when the White House press secretary used the syndrome as a punchline during a briefing; and when, as one poignant scene in a sitcom of the time put it, it was believed AIDS was “killing all the right people.”

The scene in question, from the second season of the sitcom Designing Women, first aired on October 5, 1987

The LGBTQ+ community desperately needed allies in those primordial days, and the “L” in the acronym stood hand in hand with their brethren. They organized, marched, rallied, screamed, and fought like hell. Baim did all that while informing, dispelling misinformation, pairing a human face to the crisis, and saving lives along the way. She won’t want to hear this, but I say give her all the awards.

Ahead of Thursday, December 1, World AIDS Day—a commemoration that started in 1988 as the first-ever global health day—it’s worth noting that HIV, the virus that causes AIDS if left untreated, is now a manageable condition with multiple treatment options, and that while the threat of infection seems like something for the history books, the World Health Organization estimates that 650,000 people died from HIV-related causes globally last year alone, adding to the more than 40 million worldwide deaths since virologists first classified it.

AIDS, and the stigma it carried, robbed the world of a whole generation of artists, thinkers, performers, storytellers, and everyday folk who hid their true identities till the end because the world around them wasn’t ready to hear it, let alone accept it. To them I say I remember, and I thank you for being at the forefront. I, and many others, are indebted to you for paving the way, for taking the brunt of this epidemic, and for bringing exposure to a community that had long become used to living in the shadows. I also say thanks for allowing yourself to love when chances are that, like me, you were conditioned at a young age to think you’d never be worthy of it. Thank you from that little boy who was not able to properly word it, and would pray at night for God to make him “normal.” Thank you from the adult who still prays, and now gives thanks for every single thing that makes him unique, and asks for a more compassionate and caring world—one where our mere existence isn’t an open invitation for banishment, derision, or violence.

I remember.


What Paul Moses Taught

Mike Moses never knew his father, Paul Bell Moses. For the most part, he was afraid to ask about him.  He knew about his father’s remarkable life in broad strokes. For example, he knew Moses—the first Black student admitted to Haverford College, a protege of the eminent art collector Albert Barnes, and later a scholar…


Chicago band the O’My’s make effortless, magical soul

The O’My’s sound like a band reincarnated from generations ago, as if they were dreamed up by a kid who knows too much about their grandparents’ past. How do they do it? Wisdom, skill, poise, restraint, and hazy fun pepper their music and demeanor. Their members may have been born after the “boomer” generation, but…


Special Interest infuse punk and disco with hard-hitting social themes

New Orleans punk band Special Interest have been blowing wigs back since 2018, when they dropped their debut record, Spiraling, a chaotic romp through hard-hitting social themes and wildly divergent musical directions. On “Young, Gifted, Black, in Leather” the sentiment is self-explanatory, yet the mighty wails of vocalist Alli Logout peel back new layers of…


The Gilgamanians and Maku Sica celebrate new records from distant points on the spectrum of improvisation

The Gilgamanians and Maku Sica (formerly Mako Sica) sound profoundly different from each other, but these two local ensembles share a commitment to using improvisation to tap into ideas they would never find any other way. The Gilgamanians are percussionist Michael Zerang and shortwave-radio operator Don Meckley. This is the duo’s first concert, but their…


Matches

MJM 52 seeks . . .


Classifieds

Help wanted/employment/job listings and classified listings for professional services, research, and adult services.


Celebrate Andersonville’s eclectic independent businesses community this holiday season

Held on the first Saturday after Thanksgiving (this year November 26), Small Business Saturday celebrates independent business owners during the bustling holiday season. Shopping local is an easy way for anyone to support independent businesses and help neighborhoods thrive, and in Chicago, one of the best places to get in on the fun is Andersonville.…


Chicago Reader Nonprofit Guide 2022

A joint project with Executive Service Corps, this guide includes 501(c)(3) nonprofits, fiscally sponsored grassroots, arts, media, and other organizations, and some social enterprises.


Arts & Culture

Chicago Reader Nonprofit Guide: A joint project with Executive Service Corps


The accidental TikTok star

Sonny had spent years making music for an audience of himself when he began to understand that other people liked it too. The Chicago rapper can pinpoint a few key moments: At a party he went to in 2019, the crowd was dead, and his manager at the time commandeered the sound system to throw…


Long COVID for the arts

Theatre Communications Group, the national organization for nonprofit theater, is about to release its latest annual report on the fiscal health of the field, Theatre Facts 2021. (Yes, it’s almost 2023, but this stuff takes time to collect.) The news is not great. The report, which compares results over a five-year period, tracks the startling…


Alt Economy offers mutually aided instruction for hospitality workers

Taylor Hanna taught herself to cook on the job. “I don’t have formal training,” says the 17-year veteran of nine restaurant kitchen lines, and one half of the pickling power duo Vargo Brother Ferments. “Chefs would give me tasks to do and I wouldn’t know what they were talking about. I’d go into the walk-in…


Elder explore individual journeys through their proggy new album, Innate Passage

When Elder emerged in Massachusetts in the mid-2000s, they worshiped at the altar of stoner-doom heavyweights such as Sleep and Eyehategod. But in the years since, they’ve emerged from behind the weed to establish a voice of their own. By their fifth LP, 2020’s Omens, most of the band had relocated to Berlin, and as…


Mosque4Mosque upends stereotypes

Mosque4Mosque is not a monolithic representation of the Arab American Muslim experience, and perhaps that’s exactly the point.  Written by Omer Abbas Salem and directed by Sophiyaa Nayar, this charming production challenges all preconceived notions of a play about an Arab American Muslim family.  In this sitcom-esque dramedy, Ibrahim (played by Salem) and his family…


Apartheid and Antigone

Exquisitely paced and intellectually explosive, The Island at Court Theatre is a profoundly moving work of art. From the first moment, this production (directed by Gabrielle Randle-Bent, Court’s associate artistic director) seizes the audience and thrusts them into the world of two political prisoners of apartheid and doesn’t let go, even long after the play…


A Steadfast seasonal favorite

It begins festively enough with a giant advent calendar revealing hints of the story to come. Some symbols are cheering, like wreaths and a violin. But others are mysterious—why a giant fish and a wheelbarrow?  In The Steadfast Tin Soldier, created and directed by Mary Zimmerman (from the story by Hans Christian Andersen), we soon…


Elf off the shelf

Like much that passes for entertainment during the holiday season, this 2010 musical, based on the 2003 movie, lives on the infinitely thin line between charm and utter stupidity. The characters are all derived from earlier entertainments and holiday advertising—jolly old Santa Claus, his myriad elf slaves, the sweet naif who believes in “the spirit…


A mixed quartet

Theatre Above the Law’s sampler platter of four one-acts from the late 19th and early 20th centuries (most of them seldom produced) offers mixed results. The opening piece, A Dollar by Yiddish playwright David Pinski, feels like an extended acting exercise in which archetypes (the Comedian, the Villain, the Ingenue, etc.) fight over the titular…


What’s new, pussy cat?

At 25 years old, The Lion King has been seen by more than 110 million people and played every continent but Antarctica. Between global warming and ticket demand, it’s probably just a matter of time.  The latest U.S. tour to stop in Chicago feels significantly less lavish from earlier versions that blew audiences and critics…


Kartemquin Films continues to grow

About the decision to hire Amir George, Gordon Quinn explains, “We really wanted someone we felt was going to help transform us into what the next iteration of Kartemquin would be.”


Our bodies, but whose choice?

It was around 2010 that writer-actor-director Julie Proudfoot was sitting in a Starbucks at the IC station downtown, waiting for the South Shore line to take her home, when she became aware of two young couples sitting at an adjacent table. “And the males were not only saying sexist things to the young women,” Proudfoot…


The MCA Store helps Chicagoans give the gift of art this holiday season

The Museum of Contemporary Art is synonymous with joy and expression. But some people don’t realize that, along with being one of Chicago’s top cultural destinations for its expansive galleries, cutting-edge exhibits, and carefully curated events, it’s an excellent place to find the perfect gift for the creative spirits and art lovers in your life.…


Philadelphia band They Are Gutting a Body of Water keep shoegaze weird on Lucky Styles

While on tour in 2018, I played a show in a dusty Philadelphia warehouse with locals They Are Gutting a Body of Water, a ragtag four-piece of young shoegaze revivalists. They really connected with me: they looked awkward and out of place, and they played beat-up old gear, but they put so much heart and…


Erica Mei Gamble releases a set of minimalist beats and electronics four years in the making

Erica Mei Gamble has been a key part of Chicago’s DIY experimental- and dance-music communities for more than a decade. She has several musical projects—including Sarica, A+E, and her S&M-themed goth horror duo with Sarah Leitten, Dungeon Mother—and she’s also the scene’s most diligent video preservationist. Gamble has posted sets by hundreds of artists dating…


Rethinking equity in the built environment

The house next door to mine was torn down. My neighbors don’t quite remember the year, but the resident local historian, Maurice, who has lived on the block since the late 60s, was shipped off to Vietnam and, upon his return in 1972, the house had vanished. The product of “slum clearance” on Chicago’s west…


Bad Animal captures Chicago’s glimmering indie music scene

Bad Animal feels like the natural progression for their fledgling production company [Emulsion Lab], marrying the indie music locus that inspired their start with the drive for creating projects that rival the scale of their DIY counterparts. 


TheMIND celebrates the deluxe version of Don’t Let It Go to Your Head with his first Chicago headlining gig

Chicago singer and producer Zarif Wilder, aka theMIND, has lent his gilded vocals and carefully crafted instrumentals to more hip-hop and R&B releases than I could possibly list here. He’s worked with practically every important rapper to emerge from the city in the past decade, including the three in the supergroup Ghetto Sage: Smino, Noname,…


Support local veterans with your purchase of Illinois Lottery’s Winter Winnings specialty ticket

In 2006 the Illinois Lottery launched the first Instant Lottery ticket in the country that designated 100 percent of its profits toward organizations that support veterans in Illinois. Working with the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs, the Illinois Lottery has raised over $20 million to fund the Veterans Cash program that has awarded grants to…


The Florida strategy

Poor Darren Bailey. The Chicago City Wire, the so-called newspaper intended to scare people like me into voting for him, arrived on Election Day, a week after I’d already voted early for someone else. Blame it on the U.S. Postal Service, Senator Bailey. In fact, I was paging through the City Wire while the results…


Walter Jagiello defined the polka sound of Polish Chicago

I’m part Polish, but in 18 years of the Secret History of Chicago Music, I’ve somehow never covered a polka musician. By certain generous estimates, around 1,900,000 people of Polish descent live in the Chicago metropolitan area—it’s the largest such community in the United States and the second worldwide only to Warsaw. Polka originated in…


Rest in power to Meta Mo of Rubberoom

In the early 90s, Chicago hip-hop first began making waves around the country. Several local acts put out albums on national labels in 1992: Smash Records released Ten Tray’s Realm of Darkness, Loud Records dropped Tung Twista’s Runnin’ Off at da Mouth, and Relativity issued Common Sense’s Can I Borrow a Dollar? That same year,…

Read More

Editor’s note: I rememberEnrique Limónon November 28, 2022 at 11:08 pm Read More »

Jose Abreu ranks high among the Chicago White Sox greatsTodd Welteron November 28, 2022 at 11:19 pm

Jose Abreu has left the Chicago White Sox for free-agent riches with the Houston Astros. Another beloved Sox player is going to attempt to chase that elusive World Series ring with another team.

Abreu is joining the defending World Series champions on a three-year deal. The Astros are adding the 2020 American League MVP to an already potent lineup.

As if the White Sox road to winning a World Series during their contention window was not already hard enough, they now have to take on a team that has their former franchise face.

Hey, that is what contending teams do to continue to sustain success in this league which is something the White Sox never have.

The @astros just got even better.

The defending champs have reportedly agreed to a 3-year deal with 2020 AL MVP Jos? Abreu ? pic.twitter.com/U1JRPzu3WQ

— MLB Network (@MLBNetwork) November 28, 2022

Abreu’s home run numbers were down last year as he hit just 15. He still had a really good slash line of .304/.378/.446 and was a 4.2 wins above replacement (WAR) player.

During those tough-to-watch rebuilding years, Abreu was one of the few reasons to turn on Chicago White Sox baseball. He was a three-time All-Star and Silver Slugger. He took home the 2014 AL Rookie of the Year award and 2020 MVP of the American League.

All good things must end although it would have been nice if he retired with the White Sox. Then again, not everyone can have the Paul Konerko ending.

The Chicago White Sox roster redundancy at first base and designated hitter caused Abreu’s departure.

Yasmani Grandal, Andrew Vaughn, Gavin Sheets, and Eloy Jimenez will take up the at-bats in 2023 at either first or DH. It will be tough to see Abreu wear another uniform, especially one that sports an Astros logo.

Remember that the #WhiteSox get to watch the Astros (& Jose Abreu) raise their World Series banner in front of them on Opening Day.

— Herb Lawrence (@Ecnerwal23) November 28, 2022

Jose Abreu took over first base from Chicago White Sox legend Paul Konerko.

Following a franchise icon like Konerko would be a tall task for most players. Abreu did it with ease.

Abreu leaves the Chicago White Sox 13th on the franchise’s batting average list. Frank Thomas and Konerko are the only players to hit more home runs than Abreu did in a White Sox uniform.

Abreu is fifth all-time on the franchise list for RBI and he sits at 10th in runs. Abreu has the highest OPS among all the White Sox first basemen.

He is a career 27.6 fWAR which is ahead of Konerko’s 24. Konerko has a World Series ring and one of the greatest home runs ever hit in franchise history.

That still does not take away from the greatness Abreu achieved in Chicago. This is not meant to pit who was greater among the two players.

Also, Konerko did not lose two seasons of contention because the owner thought it was a good idea to bring back a Hall of Fame manager despite the game passing that manager by.

Abreu has done enough to have his number 79 retired by the White Sox. The Sox already have 11 numbers retired and Abreu ranks right up there with those great players.

Read More

Jose Abreu ranks high among the Chicago White Sox greatsTodd Welteron November 28, 2022 at 11:19 pm Read More »

The Chicago Bulls need a star, and Patrick Williams is finally developingRyan Heckmanon November 28, 2022 at 7:31 pm

Nearly 20 games into the season, and the Chicago Bulls are still trying to establish an identity.

This past offseason, the Bulls re-signed Zach LaVine on max money, and whether or not Bulls fans want to admit it, he’s not been worth it. LaVine has failed to show up in big moments this year, and the extension is looking like a pain point rather than a necessary deal.

DeMar DeRozan has still been brilliant, for the most part. He’s carried the team. But, beyond DeRozan, the Bulls haven’t had that second guy step up consistently. But, one player is hoping to change that narrative.

Third-year forward Patrick Williams needed to take a big step this year in order to prove he was worth taking at number 4 overall a couple of years ago. To begin the season, he looked lost. However, Williams has slowly been turning a corner.

Patrick Williams sounds confident he can become a star for the Chicago Bulls, who would love to see that happen.

After practice on Sunday, Williams told the media that he likes where he’s at in his development:

“I told you I was going to figure it out. I think I’m still figuring it out. But I’m 100 percent locked in on being the player that I want to be. I always felt I had what it took to be a really good player in this league. But now I’m starting to feel like I have what it takes to be a star and a superstar in this league. I’m kind of trying to take that role on and build on it day-by-day.”

This mentality is huge for Williams, because the Bulls need an outspoken, confident star with this type of attitude. Both DeRozan and LaVine aren’t the “rah rah” type of guys. LaVine is the most outspoken of the two, but steps up far less often than he should.

P-Will kinda cooked Tatum pic.twitter.com/oG9oM6Pkym

— Bulls Talk (@NBCSBulls) November 22, 2022

This season, one of the things Williams is doing noticeably different is where he’s taking his shots from — there are a lot more coming from beyond the arc. In fact, over 40 percent of Williams’ shot attempts are coming from three-point range. That number is up from his previous career-high of 28 percent which came last year.

Williams is taking three outside shots per game, on average, and knocking down nearly 46 percent of them. Over his last four games, Williams has scored in double figures each night. He’s averaged 12.8 points, 5.0 rebounds, 1.7 assists, 1.3 blocks and 0.75 steals per game in those four contests. He’s shooting 57 percent from the field and has knocked down 10 of 15 from downtown.

Just a couple of nights ago, against the Milwaukee Bucks, Williams held Giannis Antetokounmpo in check for most of the game until he flipped a switch later on. Williams’ defensive presence is something the Bulls are counting on getting better and better. Between his defense and three-point shooting, Williams can be a guy to keep the Bulls competitive.

But, will his ascension continue? Can he keep on improving and taking shots with that confidence? That’s the big question.

Read More

The Chicago Bulls need a star, and Patrick Williams is finally developingRyan Heckmanon November 28, 2022 at 7:31 pm 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 »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon November 28, 2022 at 8:01 am

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 ShowBen Joravskyon November 28, 2022 at 8:01 am Read More »