What’s New

1 killed, 2 critically wounded in Humboldt Park shootingSun-Times Wireon October 27, 2021 at 8:14 pm

Three people were shot, one fatally, in Humboldt Park Oct. 27, 2021. | Sun-Times file

They were on the sidewalk about 1:25 p.m. in the 700 block of North Trumbull Avenue when someone unleashed gunfire, Chicago police said.

A man was killed and two others were wounded in a shooting Wednesday afternoon in Humboldt Park on the West Side.

They were on the sidewalk about 1:25 p.m. in the 700 block of North Trumbull Avenue when someone unleashed gunfire, Chicago police said.

A 24-year-old man suffered gunshot wounds to his arm and side. He was taken to Norwegian American American Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

Another man, 27, was shot in the torso and back, police said. The third man, 23, was struck in the chest. Both were taken to Mount Sinai Hospital in critical condition.

No arrests have been reported. Area Four detectives are investigating.

Read More

1 killed, 2 critically wounded in Humboldt Park shootingSun-Times Wireon October 27, 2021 at 8:14 pm Read More »

Blackhawks to begin settlement talks with lawyer representing Brad Aldrich sexual assault victims next weekBen Popeon October 27, 2021 at 8:14 pm

Former Blackhawks video coach Brad Aldrich assaulted a player during the 2010 playoffs, an investigation found. | Sun-Times file photo

Despite filing Tuesday new supports to their motions to dismiss two lawsuits, the Blackhawks seemingly intend to follow through on CEO Danny Wirtz’s call for a “fair resolution.”

Blackhawks CEO Danny Wirtz, discussing on Tuesday the condemnatory results of an investigation into the organization’s handling of a 2010 sexual assault, said he’d instructed Hawks lawyers to reach a “fair resolution” in two related lawsuits.

Hours later, facing coincidentally timed Tuesday court deadlines, Hawks lawyers nonetheless filed new documents supporting their already-pending motions to dismiss both lawsuits.

But the team insists those filings were simply legal requirements and they’ve already scheduled settlement talks with Susan Loggans, the lawyer representing the victims of former Hawks video coach Brad Aldrich.

“Consistent with Danny Wirtz’s public statement, Blackhawks litigation counsel reached out to Ms. Loggans yesterday to begin discussions, [and] a call is scheduled for early next week,” the Hawks said in a statement Wednesday to the Sun-Times.

“As to the filings yesterday, in compliance with the Court’s established briefing schedule, we filed our replies in support of our pending motions to dismiss in the ongoing lawsuit on yesterday’s deadline. Both cases remain pending, but we will engage in good faith efforts to fairly resolve these matters to rectify the harm John Does have suffered to the extent possible.”

The lawsuits pertain to former Hawks video coach Brad Aldrich. The first claims the Hawks negligently addressed Aldrich’s sexual assault of a Hawks prospect (identified as “John Doe 1”) during the 2010 playoffs. The second claims the Hawks helped Aldrich get a job at Houghton (Michigan) High School, where he later assaulted a 16-year-old (“John Doe 2”) in 2013.

The lawsuits’ filings this year helped bring the Aldrich allegations to light. The Jenner & Block investigation that concluded Tuesday, costing Hawks general manager Stan Bowman and executive Al MacIsaac their jobs, indeed concluded the Hawks covered up Aldrich’s behavior for three weeks to preserve “team chemistry” during the Stanley Cup Final — and during that time, Aldrich assaulted another team employee.

The Hawks’ Tuesday filings acknowledge receipt of the investigation report, but claim in footnotes it “actually strengthens [the Hawks’] statute of limitations defense” in the Doe 1 case and “strengthens [the Hawks’] defense that [they] did not provide a job recommendation to Houghton High School” in the Doe 2 case.

The new filing footnotes also include the following language, however, subtly hinting at the team’s shift away from endlessly battling the cases over legal technicalities in court.

“The overall conduct described is not acceptable to [the Hawks], and [the Hawks’] response to the alleged sexual misconduct did not live up to the team’s values or standards,” the filing states. “[The Hawks have] implemented organizational and administrative safeguards to ensure that these values and standards are observed.”

Read More

Blackhawks to begin settlement talks with lawyer representing Brad Aldrich sexual assault victims next weekBen Popeon October 27, 2021 at 8:14 pm Read More »

Tony Award winner Kenny Leon to direct Steppenwolf’s ‘King James’Miriam Di Nunzioon October 27, 2021 at 8:00 pm

Kenny Leon accepts the award for best revival of a play for “A Soldier’s Play” during the 74th Annual Tony Awards at Winter Garden Theatre on September 26, 2021, in New York City. | Getty Images for Tony Awards Pro

Kenny Leon, the Tony Award winning director for the Broadway revival production of “A Raisin in the Sun” in 2014, will be helming Steppenwolf Theatre’s world premiere production of “King James,” it was announced Wednesday.

“King James,” written by Steppenwolf ensemble member Rajiv Joseph (“Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo”) in a co-commissioned production with Center Theatre Group, will debut in Steppenwolf’s Downstairs Theater next March. Told through the eyes of two sports superfans, the play looks at the life and career of NBA superstar LeBron James’ reign in Cleveland, and the impact that sports and athletes in general have on the lives their fans and communities. Former Steppenwolf artistic director Anna D. Shapiro, who announced in May that she was stepping down from the post, was initially slated to direct “King James.”

Last year, Leon earned a best director Tony nomination for “A Soldier’s Play,” which won the award for best revival of a play. In accepting the Tony for the production, Leon emphasized the need for increased inclusivity and diversity in theater, including the scope of works. “No diss to Shakespeare, no diss to Ibsen, to Chekhov, to Shaw — they’re all at the table,” he said, “but the table’s got to be bigger.”

His critically acclaimed career also includes television, most notably his Emmy-nominated turn as director of “Robin Roberts Presents: Mahalia” for the Lifetime network.

In 2006, Leon directed Goodman Theatre’s production of August Wilson’s “Radio Golf.” He is currently the senior resident director for the New York City-based Roundabout Theatre Company.

Tickets for “King James” are currently part of Steppenwolf’s membership series; single tickets will go on sale at a later date.

Read More

Tony Award winner Kenny Leon to direct Steppenwolf’s ‘King James’Miriam Di Nunzioon October 27, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »

Martin Luther King Jr. and the racist roots of gun control lawsJacob Sullumon October 27, 2021 at 8:00 pm

The Supreme Court will hear a challenge to a New York law that shows the racist roots of gun control laws, Jacob Sullum writes. | J. Scott Applewhite / AP Photos

Black gun rights groups are among those challenging a New York law that demands applicants show “proper cause” to obtain a license to carry a firearm.

After his home was bombed in 1956, Martin Luther King Jr. applied for a permit to carry a gun. Despite the potentially deadly threats that King faced as a leader of the Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott, the county sheriff, Mac Sim Butler, said no.

Next week, the Supreme Court will consider a challenge to a New York law similar to the Alabama statute that empowered local officials like Butler to decide who could exercise the constitutional right to bear arms. The briefs urging the Court to overturn New York’s statute include several from African American organizations that emphasize the long Black tradition of armed self-defense, the racist roots of gun control laws, and their disproportionate impact on racial and ethnic minorities.

“I went to the sheriff to get a permit for those people who are guarding me,” King told fellow protest organizers at a February 1956 meeting. “In substance, he was saying, ‘You are at the disposal of the hoodlums.'”

At the time, it was illegal in Alabama to carry a pistol “in any vehicle” or concealed on one’s person without a license. The law said a probate judge, police chief or sheriff “may” issue a license “if it appears that the applicant has good reason to fear injury to his person or property, or has any other proper reason for carrying a pistol.”

Nowadays, Alabama, like most states, requires law enforcement officials to issue a carry permit unless the applicant is legally disqualified. New York, by contrast, demands that applicants show “proper cause,” an amorphous standard that is not satisfied by a general interest in self-defense.

As the National African American Gun Association notes in its Supreme Court brief, Southern states historically used that sort of discretionary carry permit law to disarm Black people, leaving them at the mercy of white supremacist violence. African Americans who defied the law risked arrest for exercising their Second Amendment rights.

That remains true in New York, as the Black Attorneys of Legal Aid and several other public defender organizations note in their brief. “Each year,” they say, “we represent hundreds of indigent people whom New York criminally charges for exercising their right to keep and bear arms,” nearly all of whom are Black or Hispanic.

That situation is unsurprising, the brief says, given the origins of New York’s gun licensing regime. The Sullivan Act of 1911, which required a license to own handguns and “gave local police broad discretion to decide who could obtain one,” was enacted after “years of hysteria over violence that the media and the establishment attributed to racial and ethnic minorities — particularly Black people and Italian immigrants.”

A brief from Black Guns Matter argues that New York’s law is of a piece with the firearm restrictions that Southern states imposed after the Civil War. When the 14th Amendment prohibited explicitly racist laws, white supremacists switched to facially neutral rules that, in practice, made it difficult or impossible for Black people to defend themselves.

Black Guns Matter emphasizes that “armed self-defense has always been vitally important to the African American community” — a tradition that stretches from the struggle against slavery through the civil rights movement. Until relatively recently, as Fordham University law professor Nicholas Johnson details in his 2014 book “Negroes and the Gun,” mainstream Black organizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People steadfastly upheld that tradition.

Not anymore. The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which grew out of a fundraising campaign based on the successful defense of Black people who used guns to resist racist aggression, supported the local handgun bans that the Supreme Court overturned in 2008 and 2010.

In the New York case, the organization argues that the state’s virtual ban on public carry is an “important tool” in addressing urban violence. It does not even entertain the possibility that armed self-defense might be an important tool in responding to the same problem.

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @JacobSullum

Send letters to [email protected]

Read More

Martin Luther King Jr. and the racist roots of gun control lawsJacob Sullumon October 27, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »

AP final Illinois high school football rankingsAssociate Presson October 27, 2021 at 8:48 pm

The ball is just out of reach for Phillips’s Kyerre Howard (11) during their 14-12 win over Simeon at Gately Stadium. | Kevin Tanaka/For the Sun-Times

The latest rankings of Illinois high school football teams in each class, according to an Associated Press panel of sportswriters.

The latest rankings of Illinois high school football teams in each class, according to an Associated Press panel of sportswriters.

Class 8A

1. Loyola (13) (9-0) 130 1
2. Maine South (8-1) 111 3
3. Warren (8-1) 105 4
4. Neuqua Valley (8-1) 88 2
5. Lincoln-Way East (7-2) 63 T6
6. Hinsdale Central (8-1) 60 8
7. South Elgin (9-0) 40 T6
8. Naperville Central (6-3) 37 9
9. Lockport (8-1) 27 NR
10. Marist (6-3) 17 5

Others receiving votes: York 16, Naperville North 12, Bolingbrook 4, Glenbard West 3, O’Fallon 2.

Class 7A

1. Brother Rice (9) (7-2) 133 2
2. Batavia (5) (9-0) 130 1
3. Wheaton North (8-1) 109 3
4. St. Rita (7-2) 93 5
5. Mount Carmel (6-3) 87 4
6. Normal (9-0) 60 7
7. Hononegah (9-0) 47 8
8. Moline (8-1) 39 9
9. Prospect (7-2) 31 6
10. Buffalo Grove (8-1) 26 NR

Others receiving votes: Hersey 9, Plainfield Central 3, Hoffman Estates 2, Pekin 1.

Class 6A

1. East St. Louis (13) (7-2) 148 1
2. Cary-Grove (2) (9-0) 137 2
3. St. Ignatius (8-1) 112 4
4. Lemont (9-0) 109 5
5. Wauconda (9-0) 76 7
6. Crete-Monee (6-3) 64 6
7. Lake Forest (7-2) 56 8
8. Harlem (8-1) 51 9
9. Washington (7-2) 32 10
10. Deerfield (8-1) 13 NR

Others receiving votes: Prairie Ridge 12, Simeon 7, Kenwood 5, Belvidere North 2, Richards 1.

Class 5A

1. Fenwick (10) (7-2) 153 2
2. Kankakee (6) (9-0) 141 3 in Class 6A
3. Morris (9-0) 125 3
4. Mahomet-Seymour (9-0) 98 4
5. Peoria (7-2) 88 5
6. Sterling (7-2) 62 7
(tie) Mascoutah (8-1) 62 6
8. Glenbard South (8-1) 50 8
9. Marion (8-1) 36 9
10. Nazareth (5-4) 23 NR

Others receiving votes: Morton 12, Marmion 9, Morgan Park 8, Sycamore 8, Rockford Boylan 5.

Class 4A

1. Joliet Catholic (14) (9-0) 157 1
2. Rochester (3) (8-1) 156 1 in Class 5A
3. Sacred Heart-Griffin (8-1) 136 2
4. Richmond-Burton (9-0) 120 3
5. Genoa-Kingston (8-1) 87 5
6. Phillips (7-2) 85 6
7. St. Francis (7-2) 74 7
8. Kewanee (8-1) 45 4
9. Peoria Notre Dame (6-3) 26 8
10. Wheaton Academy (7-2) 16 NR
(tie) Breese Central (8-1) 16 10

Others receiving votes: Coal City 7, Stillman Valley 4, Freeburg 3, Carterville 2, Quincy Notre Dame 1.

Class 3A

1. IC Catholic (13) (8-1) 146 1
2. Byron (1) (9-0) 132 3
3. Tolono Unity (9-0) 111 5
4. Williamsville (1) (8-1) 106 4
5. Princeton (8-1) 94 6
6. Mt. Carmel, IL (9-0) 80 8
7. Reed-Custer (8-1) 56 T10
8. Durand (8-1) 43 T10
9. Benton (9-0) 31 NR
10. Monticello (7-2) 20 9

Others receiving votes: Fairfield 4, Carlinville 1, Paxton-Buckley-Loda 1.

Class 2A

1. Wilmington (10) (9-0) 135 2 in Class 3A
2. Decatur St. Teresa (4) (9-0) 127 1
3. Breese Mater Dei (9-0) 112 2
4. Downs Tri-Valley (9-0) 86 3 in Class 2A
5. Farmington (9-0) 85 7 in Class 3A
6. Bismarck-Henning (9-0) 59 4
7. Pana (9-0) 49 5
8. Bishop McNamara (5-4) 29 NR
9. Nashville (8-1) 28 NR
10. Knoxville (8-1) 24 8

Others receiving votes: Maroa-Forsyth 21, Johnston City 11, Erie-Prophetstown 2, North-Mac 1, Sterling Newman 1.

Class 1A

1. Carrollton (4) (8-1) 129 1
2. Athens (10) (8-1) 128 6 in Class 2A
3. Camp Point Central (8-1) 119 4
4. Forreston (7-2) 105 6
5. Lena-Winslow (1) (7-2) 83 3
6. Fulton (7-2) 76 5
7. Abingdon (8-1) 68 2
8. Ottawa Marquette (8-1) 34 7
9. St. Bede (7-2) 32 8
10. Aurora Christian (6-3) 17 9

Others receiving votes: Arcola 14, Cumberland 13, Gilman Iroquois West 5, Nokomis 2.

Read More

AP final Illinois high school football rankingsAssociate Presson October 27, 2021 at 8:48 pm Read More »

Looking forward to future celebrations of the Blackhawks’ 2010 Stanley Cup title? Me neither.Rick Morrisseyon October 27, 2021 at 8:40 pm

Then-Blackhawks president John McDonough hoists the Stanley Cup after his team beat the Flyers to win the 2010 title. | Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

The franchise’s cover-up of the alleged sexual assault of a young player from that team takes the shine off the trophy.

We love our anniversaries in sports, don’t we? A team wins a championship and 20 or 25 years later there’s a celebration of the achievement. Players and coaches return to the scene of the wonderful time and take turns waving to a stadium full of adoring fans. Stories are told and smiles shared.

Few things are warmer in life than good memories.

The 20th anniversary of the Blackhawks’ 2010 Stanley Cup title is less than 10 years off, and it’s going to be very difficult to honor an accomplishment that now carries so much pain and ugliness.

How can you separate that championship and the organizational cover-up of a sexual assault perpetrated by a Hawks video coach on a young hockey player that season? You can’t. And you won’t be able to in 2030, either, not if you’re a feeling human being.

Legacies are ruined, as they should be. The sin of choosing to protect a brand over players’ safety should be written in indelible ink on the foreheads of all involved. That includes former team president John McDonough, former general manager Stan Bowman and former coach Joel Quenneville. According to the team’s own investigation, the three men knew that a prospect accompanying the team during the playoffs that year had accused former video coach Brad Aldrich of sexually assaulting him, yet the matter was buried until the season was over. Why? They didn’t want it negatively affecting the team’s pursuit of a Stanley Cup.

That’s beyond sickening.

Bowman was a first-year general manager that season, which doesn’t excuse his silence on the allegation back then, but he did make it clear in his statement Tuesday that he had relied on McDonough to take action. McDonough didn’t report Aldrich’s conduct to the Hawks’ human-resources department until three weeks after a May 23, 2010, meeting in which McDonough, Bowman, Quenneville and other team officials discussed the alleged sexual assault.

“I promptly reported the matter to the then-President and CEO who committed to handling the matter,” Bowman said. “I learned this year that the inappropriate behavior involved a serious allegation of sexual assault. I relied on the direction of my superior that he would take appropriate action. Looking back, now knowing he did not handle the matter promptly, I regret assuming he would do so.”

I’m sure a lot of the people involved have a lot of regrets, and they’re going to have to live with them. But if you’re vile enough to try to cover up something like this, even temporarily, is it more likely you regret the decision to do so or that the cover-up was revealed? I’d argue for the latter.

Let’s not forget that after Aldrich resigned on June 16, 2010, he allegedly went on to assault two young men at Miami University and then a 16-year-old boy at a Michigan high school. Whether the Hawks provided Aldrich with a positive reference that allowed him to get jobs at those two stops is a point of contention between the franchise and lawyers for the alleged victims.

Still, put it all together, and a likable team, the one that created so many good memories in Chicago, isn’t so likeable anymore.

Maybe some of you will be able to look back fondly on the 2010 championship and the two other titles that followed. You’ll focus on the players who made it all possible – Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Duncan Keith, Corey Crawford, etc. You’ll ignore the possibility that the players knew what had happened to their young teammate at the hands of Aldrich. You’ll ignore the possibility that those players could have spoken up but didn’t.

But how will you forget that Quenneville, as beloved a coach as there has been in this city, was part of the dirty business of hiding the truth, according to the team’s investigation? Do you want him, McDonough and Bowman at a public reunion of the 2010 team?

Oh, and another question for you: Is Quenneville, a lock for the Hall of Fame before the facts of this case came out, still a certainty for enshrinement? Depends how bad a look you think a conspiracy is.

Time has a way of healing wounds or numbing pain, so I’ll leave open the possibility that I’m wrong about the difficulty of separating the 2010 team from this scandal. I’ve seen American fan bases forgive all sorts of terrible behavior.

But the clear thinking among us, the ones whose tolerance for bad behavior ends at abuse of any kind, won’t forget. I’m certain the victim won’t. If there’s an anniversary to celebrate that Stanley Cup team in coming years, will he show up to honor an organization that let him and others down? I sure wouldn’t.

Read More

Looking forward to future celebrations of the Blackhawks’ 2010 Stanley Cup title? Me neither.Rick Morrisseyon October 27, 2021 at 8:40 pm Read More »

Conservatives delighting in Alec Baldwin’s pain show how far we’ve fallenS. E. Cuppon October 27, 2021 at 8:30 pm

Hamptons International Film Festival Chairman Alec Baldwin at the world premiere of National Geographic Documentary Films’ ‘The First Wave’ at Hamptons International Film Festival, Oct. 7, 2021. | Mark Sagliocco/Getty Images

To parse the so-called “politics” of the right wing’s morbid schadenfreude over an innocent woman’s accidental death is an exercise in futility and frustration.

He’s, admittedly, a fairly unsympathetic figure.

Alec Baldwin, the actor, short-time talk show host, Donald Trump impersonator and longtime blowhard and villain of the right, has said and done some pretty lamentable things over the past few decades. He’s been sued for assault in several attacks on paparazzi. He was arrested for punching a man in the face during a parking spot dispute. He’s used homophobic slurs, for which he was reportedly fired by MSNBC. And even left scathing voicemail for his then-11-year-old daughter, in which he called her a “rude, thoughtless little pig.”

His anger issues are well-documented, as is his politics. He alone is to blame for his reputation and public image.

He is not to blame, however, for a tragic and horrific accidental shooting on the set of a movie he was working on.

That’s according to witnesses and court documents that describe the incident, in which cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was killed and director Joel Souza was injured. (Authorities say they haven’t ruled out charges, but it seems highly unlikely that Baldwin has any true culpability here.)

Production has been halted, Baldwin is cooperating fully, and news of ongoing safety complaints and other on-set shooting accidents has opened a startling new conversation about gun safety on film sets. It’s an important conversation — as Trevor Noah of “The Daily Show” pointed out, “Hollywood movies love using fake versions of real things for everything, except guns.”

But for some on the right, Baldwin’s tragic accident is an opportunity — a grotesque kind of comeuppance for being, well, a jerk, and more to the point, a jerk who openly supports more gun control. Somehow, to them, it’s just too delicious to resist driving home the point that someone who wants to restrict other people’s access to firearms has accidentally killed someone with a prop gun. Apparently, they think this is ironic.

Don Trump Jr. was quick to mock — and profit off of — the tragedy, posting pro-gun memes and even selling a T-shirt on his website that reads “guns don’t kill people, Alec Baldwin kills people.”

To his detractors, Trump had this to say: “Screw all the sanctimony I’m seeing out there. If the shoe was on the other foot Alex [sic] Baldwin would literally be the first person pissing on everybody’s grave trying to make a point. F–k him!”

Other right-wing personalities, from Candace Owens to Ohio Senate candidate J.D. Vance, piled on, using the opportunity to presumably rile up and delight their fans on Twitter — Owens said the incident was “poetic justice” — all while Hutchins’ family prepared to bury her.

Baldwin’s daughter Ireland took to Instagram to pointlessly, I’m sure, remind Owens, “A woman’s life was lost. Your tweets, lack of information, and ignorance are hurting people.”

To parse the so-called “politics” of the right wing’s morbid schadenfreude over an innocent woman’s accidental death is an exercise in futility and frustration.

Of course, Baldwin’s gun control stance isn’t weakened but affirmed by this incident, in which real guns and real ammunition were inappropriately handled by the armorers and prop masters who should have been responsible for them.

Responsible gun owners don’t delight in accidental shootings; we lament them.

No matter how much one dislikes Alec Baldwin for his pugnacity or his politics, it’s hard not to feel for him and his family in this difficult time. He’s responsible for accidentally killing a colleague, a wife, a mother to a 9-year-old son. Who could live with that kind of guilt?

Then again, there’s little compassion left in conservatism, at least the kind Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush liked to espouse. To many on the right, there’s one and only one objective these days: to own the libs, to grind them into the dust, even if that means hollowing out your own moral code in the process. That was evidenced in the giddy jig the movement’s current leader performed on Colin Powell’s grave just last week. Former President Trump blasted the war hero as a “RINO,” and sociopathically ended his cruel rant by shrugging, “But anyway, may he rest in peace!”

Earlier this year, when Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez spoke of a past sexual assault and hiding during the Capitol insurrection, wondering if she’d live to be a mother one day, right-wing nuts called her a liar, and accused her of needing “coddling.”

Sure, the left has its own cruelty toward Republicans, but not much that approaches quite this level of nastiness, reveling in other people’s pain.

Apparently there are no actual people in politics anymore, just avatars. And unfortunately for Baldwin, he isn’t a victim in this tragedy, but merely an avatar — one that deserves, apparently, to be kicked when he’s down. Why? Because, again, to steal Adam Serwer’s perfect summary of the Trump approach to politics, the cruelty is the point.

S.E. Cupp is the host of “S.E. Cupp Unfiltered” on CNN.

Send letters to [email protected].

Read More

Conservatives delighting in Alec Baldwin’s pain show how far we’ve fallenS. E. Cuppon October 27, 2021 at 8:30 pm Read More »

Coronavirus takes Matt Nagy out of his wheelhouseMark Potashon October 27, 2021 at 8:24 pm

Bears coach Matt Nagy said he will stay positive while in quarantine after testing positive for the coronavirus. “It makes things a lot easier,” he said. | Nam Y. Huh/AP

The Bears’ head coach thrives on in-person communications — “It kills me that I’m not able to do that,” he said. But he’s confident his staff will fill the void. Special teams coordinator Chris Tabor would be acting head coach Sunday against the 49ers if Nagy can’t be there.

Matt Nagy is day-to-day on multiple levels as head coach of the Bears. But the most urgent one Wednesday was his status for Sunday’s game against the 49ers after being put on the sidelines because of a positive test for the coronavirus.

Not surprisingly, he offered few details, other than revealing that special teams coordinator Chris Tabor would be the acting head coach if Nagy is unable to attend Sunday’s game at Soldier Field.

“Just like when you go through protocol, they have a process, and that is what we work through day-by-day,” Nagy said in a Zoom press conference from an undisclosed location. “So I’m just following and listening to all the guidelines they give me.

“In the meantime, we have these contingency plans set, which we actually went through last year, so it’s helped in that regard.”

Nagy will conduct meetings with players and coaches via Zoom and watch practice through a tablet computer. He will have to test negative twice over a 48-hour span to be cleared to rejoin the team. He said he did not know the earliest he could be cleared.

“We’ve been able to meet together virtually on Zoom [and] it’s been a heck of a lot better than it was last year — I guess we’ve advanced in that process,” Nagy said. “[I] appreciate that from the guys and coaches, so we’re going to continue to roll and adapt through this process.

“This is why it’s very important when you have your staff that you believe in and you’ve gone through this, you’ve prepared. Just like when there’s an injury, it’s next-man-up … I have a lot of faith and trust in the players and coaches while I’m not there in person.”

Still, this can’t be easy for Nagy. He thrives on in-person and one-on-one communication. He can’t do that this week.

“One of my strengths is the relationships with the players and being able to connect with them and be there for them and support them,” Nagy said. “So it kills me that I’m not able to do that.

“But that’s life. And one of the biggest things as we go through what we’re going through right now — whether it’s as a team sitting at 3-4 or me personally being positive for COVID and how it affects my family etc. — what I have to do, which is to my core, is stay positive. When you stay positive it makes things a lot easier. And it also helps others out. Whatever it is … I’m going to stay positive. And then we’ll see what happens.”

At least for one week, Nagy’s absence isn’t likely to make a big difference for the 3-4 Bears.

“It hasn’t made that much of a difference, just because our meetings are all on Zoom,” quarterback Justin Fields said. The first difference would be this week just him not being out at practice. Other than that, stuff has been pretty much the same.”

If Nagy misses Sunday’s game against the 49ers, the Bears actually have tough acts to follow. When Browns coach Kevin Stefanski missed a wild-card playoff game against the Steelers because of the coronavirus last season, the Browns won 48-37 on the road. This season, Cardinals coach Kliff Kingsbury missed a road game against the Browns on Oct. 17 because of the coronavirus, and the Cardinals won 37-14.

Nagy said he has studied the Browns example for tips on how to handle this week.

“They’ve done a really good job with that. You’ve got to credit them,” Nagy said of the Cardinals. “The biggest thing is that we continue to talk through this process and everyone over-communicates — we adapt, we stay positive and we do everything we can to get a win this weekend.”

Read More

Coronavirus takes Matt Nagy out of his wheelhouseMark Potashon October 27, 2021 at 8:24 pm Read More »

Christkindlmarket 25th Anniversary Mugs And Ornament RevealedJulie Caion October 27, 2021 at 7:46 pm

‘Tis the season for Glühwein—finally! With holiday markets coming back in Chicago, Christkindlmarket is also making its return this winter after a pandemic-driven hiatus last year. Mark your calendar as Christkindlmarket 25th anniversary market opens in both Daley Plaza and Gallagher Way on Nov. 19.

Experience the most authentic traditional holiday market of its kind outside of Europe. With a unique shopping experience, family-friendly events, and intercultural activities, Christkindlmarket offers holiday cheer for everyone. The return of roasted nuts, fresh pretzels, bratwurst, crepes, and glühwein, or mulled wine, all in one place is just a few nights of sleep away.

Advertisement

Image Credit: Christkindlmarket

Old and new traditions

Every Christkindlmarket marks the return of its beloved souvenir mugs, but this year will be a little different. In previous years, market patrons would expect to drink their glühwein out of boot-shaped mugs. As cute as these little boots look in our cupboards, it can be challenging drinking out of them. 

This year’s official annual mug comes in a classic flute shape, last seen in 2013. It dazzles in a dark emerald green that matches this year’s logo. The stein shows a colorful and detailed market scene with the iconic Chicago skyline behind it. Meanwhile, Peppermint the Penguin returns for duty as the non-alcoholic beverage mug. Decked out in a tuxedo with an emerald green bow tie and collar, Peppermint is looking sharp and ready for the festivities. He’s holding a Chicago-themed dish towel with one fin and on his back, market visitors are celebrating.

Advertisement

Christkindlmarket is also releasing its first-ever annual ornament. The new souvenir is a high-quality glass globe hand-painted from Poland. It shows a Christkindlmarket scene with a red-striped vendor booth and a giant shimmering Christmas tree with glitter-dunked ornaments in front of the Chicago skyline lit up by fireworks.

Image Credit: Christkindlmarket

Holiday gifts available for pre-order

The Virtual Holiday Market is also back in full swing. You can pre-order the 2021 souvenir mugs and ornament online. Both mugs run for $7 each and the ornament for $35. A special anniversary gift set includes both mugs and the ornament. 

Advertisement

Three “A Few of our Favorite Things” gift boxes are also available. They feature carefully selected assortments of vendor goodies as well as a set of two 2021 souvenir mugs. Boxes range in price from $49.99-$99.99.

Feeling nostalgic or missed out on past mugs? A small selection of past Christkindlmarket mugs from 2017-2019 are also available. All pre-orders will ship starting Nov. 25.

Advertisement

The new mugs and ornament will also be available in person when the market returns, though there are no guarantees they won’t run out—so go early!

Image Credit: Christkindlmarket

Plan your trip now!

Christkindlmarket Chicago (Nov. 19-Dec. 24)

Advertisement

Daley Plaza, 50 W Washington St, Chicago, IL 60602

Regular Hours:

Advertisement

Sundays-Thursdays: 11 a.m.-8 p.m.
Fridays-Saturdays: 11 a.m.-10 p.m.

Special Hours: 

Thanksgiving (Nov. 25), Christmas Eve (Dec. 24): 11 a.m.-4 p.m.

Christkindlmarket Wrigleyville (Nov. 19-Dec. 31)

Advertisement

Gallagher Way, 3635 N Clark St, Chicago, IL 60613

Regular Hours:

Mondays-Thursdays: 3-9 p.m.
Fridays-Saturdays: 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Sundays: 11 a.m.-7 p.m.

Special Hours: 

Thanksgiving (Nov. 25), Christmas Eve (Dec. 24), and New Year’s Eve (Dec. 31): 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
Christmas Day (Dec. 25): Closed

You can learn more about Christkindlmarket here.

Featured Image Credit: Christkindlmarket 

Read More

Christkindlmarket 25th Anniversary Mugs And Ornament RevealedJulie Caion October 27, 2021 at 7:46 pm Read More »

Colin Kaepernick, Kevin Durant revisit their teens in smart, engaging streaming seriesRichard Roeperon October 27, 2021 at 7:01 pm

Colin Kaepernick offers recollections of his life as a teenage dual-threat baseball/football prospect in “Colin in Black and White.” | NETFLIX

‘Colin in Black & White,’ ‘Swagger’ dramatize the formative years of the two outspoken athletes.

The NBA superstar Kevin Durant has known his fair of controversies through the years, but it’s been confined to the usual types of dustups, e.g., Durant leaving the Oklahoma City Thunder to join the Golden State Warriors, his heated in-game conflict with Warriors teammate Draymond Green and a handful of social media-fueled embarrassments and arguments.

At 33, former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick is the same age as Durant — but while the latter remains one of the best players in the game when healthy, the former hasn’t played a down in the NFL since 2016, despite having better credentials and more talent than any number of journeyman QB’s who find work holding a clipboard and wearing a baseball hat for team after team after team. Try to make the argument Kaepernick is out of the league because of injuries and diminished skills, but come on — if he had never sat on the bench or taken a knee during the national anthem, if he had never been such an outspoken activist, is there any doubt Colin Kaepernick would still be in the league?

By true coincidence, this week marks the release of limited dramatic series based on the lives of Durant and Kaepernick — but each show is set approximately two decades in the past, chronicling the journeys of a young basketball phenom in the Washington, D.C., area and a two-sport athlete in northern California. Both series are smart, insightful, engaging and provocative efforts, with crisp writing, some bold and creative touches, and terrific performances from young and essentially unknown actors who are working with some talented and familiar veterans.

‘Swagger’

The 10-part Apple TV+ series “Swagger” is inspired by Kevin Durant’s experiences as a prized, 14-year-old hoops prospect in the DMV (D.C., Maryland, Virginia) metropolitan area, but it’s a work of fiction set in the present day. Some of the creative forces behind the brilliant “Friday Night Lights” TV series are also involved in “Swagger,” and while this new effort isn’t quite in the same league as that Hall of Fame show, you can recognize some of the influences, from the infectious soundtrack to the docudrama feel to the multiple storylines that go far beyond sports.

Apple TV+
A coach known as “Icon” (O’Shea Jackson Jr., right) becomes a father figure for 14-year-old Jace (Isaiah Hill) on “Swagger.”

Youth basketball player turned actor Isaiah Hill is a natural presence as Jace Carson, whose on-court skills have attracted the attention of scouts, coaches, pro stars and social media audiences even though he hasn’t yet entered high school. “Swagger” hits the ground running and gives us the feeling we’re eavesdropping on fully formed lives and ongoing storylines from the opening tipoff, as we’re introduced to a number of key players in Jace’s life, including:

Jace’s mother, Jenna (an outstanding and luminous Shinelle Azoroh), a single mom who is raising two children and recognizes her son has the potential to become an NBA superstar — but is also fiercely protective of him and leery of all the adults who come calling, claiming they only have Jace’s best interests in mind.

The former high school phenom turned youth coach known as “Icon” (O’Shea Jackson, Jr., in one of his best performances), who tries to instill the values of teamwork and unselfishness in his players and becomes a father figure to Jace.
Jace’s best friend and potential love interest, Crystal (Quvenshane Walls, outstanding), who has some mad basketball skills of her own and a loving albeit demanding nuclear family.

John Lamparski/Getty Images
Kevin Durant attends a premiere of his Apple TV+ series “Swagger” on Tuesday in New York.

As was the case with “Friday Night Lights,” many an episode features the obligatory Pivotal Game, but the most compelling developments take place off the court, whether it’s the police detaining Jace for making the mistake of being a young Black man taking out the garbage after dark, Crystal dealing with the aftermath of a sexual assault by her coach, or an athletic apparel rep wooing Jace and other young talents with shoes and clothing and promises of major endorsement deals — and that’s just a small sampling of the ongoing and interconnecting storylines. Whether you’re a basketball junkie or a casual fan, “Swagger” is an instantly captivating and authentic dramatic ride.

‘Colin in Black and White’

There’s much more of a “Malcolm in the Middle” meets “The Wonder Years” meets “Young Rock” vibe to the six-part Netflix series “Colin in Black and White” which combines nostalgic storytelling with documentary footage of Colin Kaepernick as he narrates the story of his life as a teenage dual-threat baseball/football prospect in the early 2000s and appears in interstitial segments in which he delivers historical lessons and valuable insights about matters of racial and social significance.

NETFLIX
Mary-Louise Parker and Nick Offerman play the adoptive parents of young Colin Kaepernick (Jaden Michael).

In the warm and often lightly comedic but occasionally sobering dramatic segments, Jaden Michael is empathetic and enormously likable as young Colin, an outstanding pitcher and quarterback who lives with his adoptive, white parents (Nick Offerman and Mary-Louise Parker, both delivering Emmy-quality work) in a comfortable, conservative California community. The 14-year-old Colin is experiencing cultural awakenings at every turn, whether he’s getting his hair styled like his new sports hero Allen Iverson (much to the bewilderment of his well-meaning but often clueless parents); dealing with football coaches who admire his talent but tell him he’s not the “prototype QB,” i.e., he’s not white, or experiencing casually cruel racism from white hotel employees while on a road trip with his baseball team. (As Colin stands with his parents in a hotel lobby, an employee approaches and asks them if this young man is bothering him.)

From time to time, we cut to Kaepernick in present day, as he gives an ongoing Ted talk-type presentation, recounting his own experiences and offering quick lessons about phenomena such as “micro aggressions,” e.g., we see an older, white partner in a law firm interviewing a Black candidate, complimenting him on being “clean” and “articulate,” but also wondering if he’s going to wear his hair in those dreads in the office. Both the traditional fictional narrative and the real-world messages are often delivered with wicked-smart comedic touches — an especially effective means of providing social commentary without making us feel as if we’re sitting in on a lecture. My only complaint about “Colin in Black and White” is that six episodes aren’t enough.

Read More

Colin Kaepernick, Kevin Durant revisit their teens in smart, engaging streaming seriesRichard Roeperon October 27, 2021 at 7:01 pm Read More »