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Yorkville Christian’s Jaden Schutt commits to DukeJoe Henricksenon September 2, 2021 at 11:00 pm

Illinois has been a fertile recruiting ground for Duke, coach Mike Krzyzewski and assistant Jon Scheyer over the years.

But Yorkville Christian’s Jaden Schutt is Duke’s first Illinois prospect to commit since Scheyer was named the Blue Devils’ coach-in-waiting.

Scheyer, who is set to take over for the legendary Krzyzewski following the 2021-22 season, has secured a commitment from the state’s best shooter and arguably its best prospect.

Schutt took an official visit to Duke this past weekend and ended a process that included visits and offers from several Big Ten programs. The 6-5 guard took an official visit to Michigan State and an unofficial visit to Illinois in June and was set to visit Florida in September.

But Schutt ended it on Tuesday morning when he committed to Scheyer and the Blue Devils before making a formal and public announcement on Wednesday.

It was the connection Schutt felt with Scheyer, the former Illinois high school basketball prodigy and McDonald’s All-American from Glenbrook North, that stood out. One of Schutt’s earliest memories of watching NCAA Tournament championship games as a kid, he says, was when Duke and Scheyer took down Butler in 2010.

The link between Schutt and Scheyer was only enhanced during his official visit this past weekend when he was able to sit down and talk to his future head coach — and the Duke staff and players — in person.

“The relationship with coach Scheyer and the staff — it just felt comfortable talking about basketball and other things outside of basketball,” said Schutt. “There was a level of comfort I had with them that stood out to me.

“It was a great, all-around feeling I had while I was down there and a really cool atmosphere. All the players love it there and they were recruiting me hard as well. It’s a very successful school, both basketball, obviously, and academically.”

An elite shooter with textbook form, outstanding range and an ability to get his shot off, Schutt has been a prolific scorer at Yorkville Christian since he arrived.

The pure-shooting guard averaged 24 points a game this past season and has already scored 1,400 career points. Schutt, who made 17 three-pointers in one game during his sophomore season, has a whopping 217 career three-pointers in three seasons.

After a standout summer where he helped lead the Illinois Wolves to an Under Armour Association championship on the grassroots basketball circuit, Schutt’s national reputation has risen.

Scheyer has been busy assembling a top-notch recruiting class — only now it’s for himself and his program. He has already landed two five-star prospects in the Class of 2022 in 6-10 forward Kyle Filipowski out of Massachusetts and 6-8 Dariq Whitehead from Montverde Academy in Florida, Now he’s tapped into Illinois to secure a top 100 talent in Schutt.

The Yorkville Christian star is excited to be part of Scheyer’s first recruiting class.

“It’s an honor to be a part of this class, the belief he has in me is real,” said Schutt. “They’ve had some great shooters and know how to utilize those shooters and know what to do with a player with my skill set. They have had a lot of players like me that have gone through Duke that have had a lot of success, both in college and the NBA.”

Schutt joins a long list of top Illinois players who have headed to Duke over the past four decades, including Scheyer. The former Glenbrook North star was an All-American at Duke and led the Blue Devils to a national championship.

Young’s Jahlil Okafor and DJ Steward, Simeon’s Jabari Parker, Fenwick’s Corey Maggette, Glenbrook North’s Chris Collins and Julian’s Sean Dockery are a few of the former Illinois prep stars who went on to play at Duke.

“This has definitely been a different experience, unlike any other,” said Schutt of the recruiting process. “It was a blessing to be recruited by all these great schools and have so many choices and getting to know these coaches. But it’s a great program Coach K has built at Duke, and it’s exciting to be able to continue that with coach Scheyer.”

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Yorkville Christian’s Jaden Schutt commits to DukeJoe Henricksenon September 2, 2021 at 11:00 pm Read More »

CPD lieutenant accused of shoving flashlight between buttocks of teen carjacking suspectMitch Dudekon September 2, 2021 at 11:00 pm

A Chicago police lieutenant allegedly shoved a flashlight between the buttocks of a handcuffed carjacking suspect and then yelled to the 17-year-old, “That’s what you get for carjacking,” prosecutors said Thursday at a felony bond hearing for the officer.

Lt. Wilfredo Roman, 44, and other officers had just caught up to a 17-year-old boy when the incident, which was recorded on police body-worn cameras, took place on the evening of Feb. 9.

The teen allegedly carjacked a man at gunpoint and later bailed out of the car and ran off after police gave chase. The teen surrendered in an alley in the 2000 block of North Leclaire Avenue in the Belmont Cragin neighborhood as he tried to scale a fence that he’d just tossed a gun over, prosecutors said.

The teen was complaining about his handcuffs being too tight and that he’d been “just running” when Roman yelled for him to “shut up” and approached him from behind and “shoved a flashlight in between [his] buttocks,” Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney Mary McDonnell said during the hearing.

The teen reacted by “yelling out,” she said. Roman then walked away and turned and yelled in the teen’s direction “That’s what you get for carjacking!” McDonnell said.

Roman is charged with aggravated battery in the public way and official misconduct, both felonies.

Roman’s attorney, James McKay, said he couldn’t believe the action landed his client in court and pointed out there was no penetration and the flashlight was never on bare skin but over the teen’s clothes.

“The movement of Lt. Roman is a split second, on the fleshiest part, outside of clothing, with absolutely no injury whatsoever,” he said. “This is a spank, or a spanking, for the love of God. I’ve had nuns that treated me far worse when I was a kid.”

The teen was not injured and didn’t request medical attention, McKay said.

“Your honor, the flashlight in question is smaller than my pen,” he said.

McKay said the teen was “an armed carjacker” who is 6-feet-2 and weighs 200 pounds.

Judge Arthur Willis took issue with McKay’s repeated reference to the teen’s alleged involvement in a carjacking.

“The fact that the individual may have engaged in a serious felony offense does not mean that he should be treated in any way different than anyone else who may come into contact with police,” he said. “That is not an argument that this court finds very persuasive.”

Juvenile charges against the 17-year-old and another teen accused in the carjacking are pending.

Willis allowed Roman to go free on a $5,000 I-bond, meaning that if he doesn’t show up to his next court date, Roman will be on the hook for the $5,000.

Willis denied prosecutors’ request that Roman surrender his FOID card and all his weapons.

“I will not order him to turn in his weapon at this time. That will be for the Chicago Police Department to decide if they wish to allow this man to continue exercising his police powers,” Willis said.

Roman, who lives on the Northwest Side, became a cop in 2000 and has accumulated more than 219 awards, McKay said. He also has two children and a fiance, all of whom were in court Thursday. Roman graduated from Steinmetz High School and received a criminal justice degree from the University of Illinois at Chicago before earning a master’s degree in business from St. Xavier University, McKay said.

Roman surrendered to members of the department’s Bureau of Internal Affairs Wednesday night at the Central District police station at 1718 S. State St., the Chicago Police Department said in a statement Thursday.

After learning of the incident in July, four months after it occurred, the department “promptly relieved Roman” of his police powers, the statement said.

“He could face additional disciplinary actions pending the outcomes of the criminal and administrative investigations,” the statement said.

McKay said Roman had never been arrested or disciplined by the police department.

Roman earns $138,150 a year, according to a city employee database.

A spokesman for the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which investigates police wrongdoing, offered no additional information Thursday other than to say an investigation involving Roman was ongoing.

Over the course of his career, Roman has been named in three civil lawsuits that have cost the city a combined $278,000.

The first suit, filed in federal court in Chicago in 2009, accused Roman and other officers of illegally searching an apartment in the 2600 block of North Kimball Avenue a year earlier. It was settled for $18,000, records show.

Roman and a group of officers were then embroiled in another federal case stemming from an incident in August 2011 in the 900 block of North Parkside Avenue in which they allegedly chased down and shot the plaintiff, Richard Keeler, “without good cause.” Brought in 2012, the lawsuit didn’t specify which officers allegedly fired the shots that struck Keeler twice and left him “severely” wounded.

The suit further accused the officers of giving false information to investigators that led to charges of aggravated assault against Keeler, who was allegedly unarmed when he was shot. A settlement of $200,000 was ultimately reached.

The most recent case, filed in Cook County court in 2015, alleged that Roman and another officer brandished their guns and arrested two brothers without cause during a street stop in November 2013, court records show. When the plaintiff, Edward Matthews, asked why he and his brother were being targeted, Roman allegedly kneed him in the stomach.

Facing felony counts of aggravated battery to a peace officer, records show Matthews was held in Cook County Jail for months and then placed on electronic monitoring before he was found not guilty. The suit was settled for $60,000.

Roman isn’t the only Chicago cop to face charges this week.

On Wednesday, two Chicago police officers were charged with aggravated battery and official misconduct for allegedly beating a 17-year-old boy they said crashed into their unmarked squad car in January and pointed a gun at them during a pursuit on the South Side.

Officers Jeffery Shafer and Victor Guebara were released on their own recognizance after a bail hearing. They were relieved of police powers in January.

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CPD lieutenant accused of shoving flashlight between buttocks of teen carjacking suspectMitch Dudekon September 2, 2021 at 11:00 pm Read More »

Bears bullish on Jason Peters at left tackleMark Potashon September 2, 2021 at 11:39 pm

For Jason Peters, last week’s preseason finale against the Titans was a positive start. But the nine-time Pro Bowl left tackle still has to prove he is ready to face opponents at regular-season game speed — and that he can hold him for an entire game after not having played since last Dec. 6.

Peters again was doing extra individual work before practice Thursday to speed up the acclimation process. But Bears general manager Ryan Pace said, “I think we were fortunate there” to sign Peters after rookie Teven Jenkins had back surgery.

“It’s exciting,” Pace said. “He’s working back into football shape — he knows that, so we’re being smart with that. But if you just watch his foot quickness and how he moves — his technique; his experience; He’s just as savvy vet that’s still moving very well. That’s a credit to the athlete that he is and keeping himself in good shape.”

Rookie Larry Borom, a fifth-round draft pick whom the Bears had “graded close” to Jenkins, according to Pace, is a legitimate option to Peters.

“Larry has lost a lot of weight since he played at Missouri,” Pace said, “so what you are seeing is a guy with a former basketball background, really athletic feet, playing almost 40 points lighter than he played in college and [is] moving a lot better. He’s looking like he can play on either side, so that’s going to pay off moving forward.”

Goldman absent

Nose tackle Eddie Goldman, who played 10 snaps against the Titans last week, was not on the practice field Thursday for undisclosed reasons. But coach Matt Nagy said prior to practice he was encouraged by Goldman’s performance.

“He’s been really good,” Nagy said. “He made some great plays, took on some double teams. The other day we were just talking about [how] it felt good for him to get out there.”

Adams returns

Wide receiver Rodney Adams, who made the initial 53-man roster before being cut Wednesday, cleared waivers and was signed to the practice squad Thursday. Adams led the Bears in the preseason with 10 receptions for 161 yards, with one touchdown.

Justin Fields note of the day

Nagy said rookie Justin Fields initially wasn’t thrilled with scout-team work but already is taking to it, Nagy said.

“It was just like, ‘This is what you gotta do — work on your feet, step up and step out and now he’s like awesome,” Nagy said. “So he gets it. He understands the way.”

Nagy said Fields also will get some reps with the game plan for the upcoming opponent — as they started doing with young players last season. And he’ll continue to work with quarterbacks coach John DeFilippo on fundamentals.

“Every week, every play and minute that goes by, he just keeps growing,” Nagy said. “Flip has a great plan ready for him.”

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Bears bullish on Jason Peters at left tackleMark Potashon September 2, 2021 at 11:39 pm Read More »

Park board nominees on hot seat about lifeguard scandalFran Spielmanon September 2, 2021 at 10:20 pm

Two new appointees to the Chicago Park District board were put on notice Thursday: aldermen want them to clean up the ugly “culture” that allegedly set the stage for sexual assault, sexual harassment, physical, verbal, drug and alcohol abuse among the district’s lifeguards.

Myetie Hamilton and Modesto Valle were on the hot seat at a confirmation hearing before the City Council’s Committee on Special Events, Cultural Affairs and Recreation. Such hearings normally are love fests.

Finance Committee Chairman Scott Waguespack pointed to the firing of Chicago Park District deputy inspector general Nathan Kipp, which Kipp has called a “concerted effort” to prevent him from “continuing to investigate criminal activity and employee misconduct that seemingly pervade” the Beaches & Pools Unit.

“That is direct retaliation, which is prohibited. And to see the board and the Park District supervisors not jump in and see that this is a problem when we have decades of this problem going on — it cannot be resolved overnight. It cannot be resolved by simply making a few changes. And it really puts any third-party report into the position of being suspect or undermining what the actual code says,” Waguespack said.

Waguespack noted the City Council is powerless to “remove anybody.” That puts the onus on the board.

“This affects men and women throughout the Park District. It’s been going on for decades. And the touches around the edge of trying to fix this issue are not gonna be done overnight. They’re not gonna be done by a third-party. It has to be done internally. And people need to be held accountable,” Waguespack said.

“I just hope you will take on this task for those of us who cannot take it on. For those victims who cannot take it on. Chicago needs to change that culture in the Park District. … Especially for those of us who have children [who] use the pools and for the employees that work there.”

When Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th) opened the questioning about the lifeguard scandal, Committee chairman Nick Sposato (38th) said he didn’t “know how fair of a question” it was.

“If either one of you wants to answer that question or just take a pass, I’m fine with it. It’s something that didn’t happen under your watch. It’s an unfortunate thing that went on. The wheels are rolling to take care of the evil people that did whatever,” Sposato said.

Hamilton said she looks at the scandal as a woman and as the mother of teenage girls.

“I believe that the parks are a public trust and that we should lead through this with transparency. We should lead through this with integrity. And also with urgency around resolving it,” she said.

A former deputy network chief at Chicago Public Schools, Hamilton said it’s her understanding an investigation has been conducted by an “external party” and a report “will be made available.”

She was apparently referring to Park District Inspector General Elaine Little, who fired Kipp and whose investigation Kipp has branded highly suspect — in part, because she has made no effort to interview Park District Superintendent Mike Kelly.

The Chicago Sun-Times reported earlier this month that in February 2020, an Oak Street Beach lifeguard sent 11 pages of explosive allegations to Kelly about lifeguards’ conduct during the summer of 2019. She said she’d been pushed into a wall, called sexually degrading and profane names by fellow lifeguards, and abandoned for hours at her post for refusing to take part in their drinking parties and on-the-job drug use.

Kelly has been under fire for giving his top managers first crack at investigating those complaints instead of referring those allegations immediately to the inspector general.

That’s what he promised the young woman he would do in an email applauding the lifeguard for her “courage” in coming forward.

Though required by park district rules, Kelly — who worked for several years in the 2000s as a park district attorney — did not contact the inspector general until a second lifeguard’s more graphic complaint of more serious allegations was forwarded to him by Lightfoot’s office.

He has acknowledged second thoughts about how he handled the first woman’s complaint.

“I would be happy to join this board and to lean into this work to bring this to a resolution with the proper mitigations that are necessary so that this will never happen again,” Hamilton said.

Valle, who runs the Center on Halsted, said the park board has “an obligation” to create “safe environments — not only for the community, but also our employees,” he said.

“There is no room for sexual harassment. I take that very seriously. I take that very seriously in my workplace,” he said.

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Park board nominees on hot seat about lifeguard scandalFran Spielmanon September 2, 2021 at 10:20 pm Read More »

Akiem Hicks’ silence is golden to BearsMark Potashon September 2, 2021 at 9:45 pm

For no reason, Bears coach Matt Nagy out of the blue made a point recently to tell Akiem Hicks how much he appreciated “the way he has handled this training camp.”

It had nothing to do with Hicks’ desire for a contract extension that compelled Nagy to massage his star defensive end. Nothing to do with any possible unhappiness or frustration he might be feeling. Maybe the mood just struck him.

“I mean, he has practiced hard. He’s being a great leader in meetings. He’s really been awesome,” Nagy said. “And for that I told him, ‘You know, sometimes we as coaches can always talk about the bad — whether it’s what you did wrong in a play or what we need to do here or there. And a lot of times we don’t give enough praise when we just take it for granted.’

“I told him, ‘Listen man, I love your leadership. I love the way you’re handling this summer and where you’re at and it’s really neat to see right now where you’re at.”

It’s good that Nagy knows where Hicks is at, because Hicks has been a mystery to the rest of us. The standout defensive end has been one of the Bears’ most publicly engaging players — not only available to reporters on a regular basis, but a willing participant who enjoys a good conversation about football and tells it like it is more often than most. For us, he was a go-to guy.

But not anymore. Hicks has taken a sudden, inexplicable heel-turn this season — refusing to fulfill any and all media responsibilities in defiance of the NFL’s media policies, and without explanation. It’s one thing when getting Khalil Mack to the media room is like pulling teeth — he’s disdained the process from the time he got here. But Hicks has done a 180 — from a good guy to a bad guy.

We know you don’t care about that. But Hicks has had a couple of curious episodes on the field as well during training camp. His agent, Drew Rosenhaus, said early in camp that Hicks, who is on the final year of a four-year $48 million contract, is looking for a contract extension.

On July 29, Hicks missed practice moments after coach Matt Nagy did not list him as injured. It later was called a foot injury. On Aug. 17, Hicks mysteriously left practice during warmups and did not return — with no explanation from Nagy. On Aug. 23, he arrived to practice 40 minutes late, again with no explanation.

So what’s wrong? Not a thing, Nagy and general manager Ryan Pace said. If Hicks is unhappy about his contract situation, they’re not seeing it.

“For me, Akiem has been in an unbelievable place,” Pace said. “How he’s been as a teammate; how he’s been in our building; the shape he’s in right now; the effort he’s playing with has been awesome. I think he’s gonna have a really big year, and we’re excited about that.”

So why did he leave practice last month?

“No update,” Nagy said at the time.

“That feels like six months ago to me,” Pace said Wednesday. “So I don’t even remember.”

Maybe there really is nothing to see here, but the Hicks situation bears watching as he goes into the final year of his contract at 31. Hicks still is the heart-and-soul of the Bears defense — ahead of Mack, linebacker Roquan Smith, nose tackle Eddie Goldman and safety Eddie Jackson. There’s a reason why Pace kept Hicks and cut cornerback Kyle Fuller to get out of a salary cap bind.

But if Pace wouldn’t splurge on 28-year-old Allen Robinson, the only extension Hicks is likely to get at this point will be at the Bears’ price — especially with with outside linebacker Robert Quinn and linebacker Danny Trevathan slowing down at 30 last season.

So Hicks likely is in the same position he’s been in for most of his NFL career — another prove-it year. Because no matter how much they love your leadership and how hard you work and how awesome you are in meetings, business is still business.

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Akiem Hicks’ silence is golden to BearsMark Potashon September 2, 2021 at 9:45 pm Read More »

Former NFL player Keith McCants dies at age 53Curt Anderson | Associated Presson September 2, 2021 at 9:20 pm

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Former NFL player Keith McCants was found dead Thursday at his home in Florida after a suspected drug overdose, investigators said. He was 53.

The Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office said in an email that deputies were called to a St. Petersburg home about 5:10 a.m. Thursday. McCants was dead inside the house, where others also apparently lived who made the 911 call.

“It appears it was a drug overdose, but we are awaiting confirmation from the medical examiner’s office,” sheriff’s spokesperson Amanda Sinni said. “This is still an open investigation.”

McCants, a linebacker, was the fourth overall pick in the first round of the 1990 NFL Draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Mobile, Alabama, native earned All-America honors as a college player at the University of Alabama.

McCants played for three seasons in Tampa, followed by stints with the then-Houston Oilers and Arizona Cardinals before his football career ended in 1995. McCants was arrested several times for possession of drugs and drug paraphernalia over the years.

His longtime friend, St. Petersburg mayoral candidate Robert Blackmon, said he and others who knew McCants decided in 2010 to try to turn his life around.

“This morning, we lost that battle,” Blackmon said in a Facebook post, adding that McCants had renewed optimism after hip replacement surgery in May.

“We began to talk about his future again. The next 20 years. Buying a boat. His signature grin was back. But for every battle I could help him fight, there were others he had to face alone,” Blackmon said.

McCants also had financial troubles, detailed in 2012 in an ESPN documentary titled “Broke,” about former professional players who went through bankruptcy and other money difficulties.

In his NFL career, McCants played in 88 games and recorded 192 tackles, 13.5 quarterback sacks and a single interception he returned for a 46-yard touchdown with the Cardinals.

After retiring from football, McCants became the first Black marine police officer in Alabama at the state Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.

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Former NFL player Keith McCants dies at age 53Curt Anderson | Associated Presson September 2, 2021 at 9:20 pm Read More »

Jay Blunk, Pete Hassen’s departures headline another Blackhawks front office shakeupBen Popeon September 2, 2021 at 9:00 pm

The Blackhawks’ front office quietly experienced another shakeup this summer.

Jay Blunk, formerly the executive vice president, and Pete Hassen, formerly the vice president of marketing, headline a lengthy list of departures.

Blunk, who jumped from the Cubs to Hawks in 2008, had operated closely with former president John McDonough until McDonough’s sudden firing last year. Hassen had worked with the Hawks since 2005.

Blunk and Hassen join Norm Maciver, who left for the Seattle Kraken in January, atop the list of executives who exited the Hawks in 2021.

Two former employees connected to the 2010 Bradley Aldrich sexual assault scandal — mental skills coach James Gary and vice president of human relations Marie Sutera — are no longer listed in the Hawks’ front office directory, either.

Gary was the first person the Hawks player Aldrich allegedly assaulted went to in May 2010 for advice, but Gary convinced the player the assault was his own fault, according to a lawsuit. Three years later, Sutera told police investigating Aldrich’s assault of a Michigan high school student that they’d need a search warrant or subpoena to gain information about Aldrich’s departure from the Hawks, according to police documents.

But the Hawks have also hired dozens of new employees this summer. New manager of hockey strategy Dominik Zrim, who previously founded the popular NHL contract-tracking website Capfriendly, and new TV studio analyst Colby Cohen are among the most public-facing of those.

The Hawks’ hiring spree — which has taken on a forward-looking focus during business president Jaime Faulkner’s first year — will continue in the coming months. Searches for new vice presidents of revenue and of marketing and content are underway.

“Our new leadership has implemented operational and leadership changes within the front office that reflect the Blackhawks’ vision for the future and the required skillsets to best implement those plans,” the team said in a statement.

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Jay Blunk, Pete Hassen’s departures headline another Blackhawks front office shakeupBen Popeon September 2, 2021 at 9:00 pm Read More »

Things to do in Chicago for theater and dance fansMary Houlihan – For the Sun-Timeson September 2, 2021 at 8:23 pm

Welcome to our highlights of events and entertainment on stage at Chicago’s theaters. From local productions to Broadway hits, our guide has the latest on shows in the city. Bookmark this page and check back for updates and ticket information.

Chicago Shakespeare Theater in the Parks

Yin He Dance is part of “Dream: A Community Reimagining of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”Yin He Dance

WHAT: Chicago Shakespeare Theater celebrates the 10th anniversary of Chicago Shakespeare in the Parks with “Dream: A Community Reimagining of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” The new staging was created in collaboration with Cruz Gonzalez-Cadel, Cage Sebastian Pierre, GQ and Joriah Kwame with artists and organizations from Englewood, Austin, Hermosa, Little Village, West Pullman and Chinatown including Me’Lo the Generation Hero, DJ Jeremy Heights, Move Me Soul, Segundo Ruiz Belvis Cultural Center, Yin He Dance and Fulton Street Collective.

WHEN: From Aug. 24-Sept. 4 at various city parks.

TICKETS: Admission is free. For updated information regarding the theater’s COVID-19 vaccination and/or mask policies as well as park locations, visit chicagoshakes.com.

PrideArts

Elissa Newcorn (from left), Kyra Leigh, Carl Herzog and Nate Hall star in PrideArts’ productoin of “The Things I Never Could Tell Steven.” Marisa KM

WHAT: PrideArts presents Jye Bryant’s “The Things I Never Could Tell Steven,” a four-character musical in which the four most important people in one man’s life struggle to communicate meaningfully with him and really know him. The cast features Carl Herzog, Kyra Leigh, Elissa Newcorn and Nate Hall under the direction of Jay Espano.

WHEN: From Aug. 19-Sept. 19

WHERE: The Broadway, Pride Arts Center, 4139 N. Broadway.

TICKETS: $30. For updated information regarding the theater’s COVID-19 vaccination and/or mask policies, visit pridearts.org.

‘Mr. Burns, a post-electric play’

Theater Wit rehearses its 2021 restaged production of “Mr. Burns, a post-electric play.” Elizabeth Lovelady

WHAT: Theater Wit returns with a restaging of its hit 2015 production of Anne Washburn’s “Mr. Burns, a post-electric play,” directed by Jeremy Wechsler. The story begins after a global catastrophe where life as we know it has ended (sound familiar?) and a small band of survivors attempt to keep civilization on a path to survival. And, yes, an episode of “The Simpsons” (“Cape Feare” in which Sideshow Bob attempts to murder Bart on a houseboat) plays a role here.

WHEN: From Aug. 27-Sept. 5 at Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont.

TICKETS: $36-$54.

VISIT: For updated information regarding the theater’s Covid 19 vaccination and/or mask policies, visit theaterwit.org.

‘Off The Map’

WHAT: The storytelling collective 2nd Story kicks off its new virtual season with “Off the Map.” a program featuring three world premiere stories that explore how to move forward in a world that is no longer familiar. Included is Jared Bellot’s “Finding Mr. Bellot,” about his first year teaching English in a public school plus stories from Katie Hauser and Karla Estela Rivera.

WHEN: Aug. 28-Sept. 4

TICKETS: pay-what-you-can.

INFO: For a look at the entire season, go to 2ndstorycom.

‘Kinky Boots’

Michael Wordly makes his Paramount Theatre debut as Lola in “Kinky Boots.”Thomas J. King

What: Live performances return for a new season at the Paramount Theatre with Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein’s high-kicking “Kinky Boots.” This first regional production of the Broadway musical, directed by Trent Stork, stars Devin DeSantis as Charlie, the shoemaker attempting to save his failing shoe factory, and Michael Wordly as Lola, the fierce drag queen who shows him the way.

When: Aug. 18-Oct. 17

Where: Paramount Theatre, 23 E. Galena, Aurora

Tickets: $36-$74

For updated information regarding the theater’s COVID-19 vaccination and/or mask policies, visit paramountaurora.com.

Theatre Y

WHAT: Theatre Y’s ambitious new adventure “You Are Here: The Emerald Camino Project” is a return of its urban pilgrimages, this time through Daniel Burnham’s Emerald Necklace — the boulevard system that links the public parks on Chicago’s West and South sides. The immersive 12-part walking experience was created with artists, community leaders and organizations across a dozen communities. “This is a joyful post-pandemic experience that connects Chicago’s diverse communities through the intersection of conversation and art,” says Theatre Y’s artistic director, Melissa Lorraine. If you are walking through the neighborhood in which you live, admission is free; all other participants are Theatre Y Members or encouraged to become members (for as little as $5/month).

WHEN: Aug. 21-Sept. 26 For updated information regarding the theater’s COVID-19 vaccination and/or mask policies as well as dates and times for each walk, visit theatre-y.com.

Blue Man Group

Blue Man Group Caroline Talbot Photography

What: Those crazy characters in blue return for more goofy fun. The show, which encourages audiences to reconnect with their inner child, is a combination of art, music, comedy and technology.

When: Ongoing

Where: Briar Street Theatre, 3133 N. Halsted.

Tickets: $49-$89

For updated information regarding the theater’s Covid 19 vaccination and/or mask policies, visit blueman.com.

Teatro ZinZanni

The artistry and the excitement of Teatro ZinZanni returns to Chicago starting July 8. Pictured: Lea Hinz.Michael Doucet

What: The immersive, whirlwind theater experience that is Teatro ZinZanni has reopened featuring a new show with a cast of comedians, aerialists, acrobats, singers, dancers and a gourmet meal, it brings comedy, music and cirque back after a long pandemic hiatus. Included among the performers are powerhouse vocalists Storm Marrero and Cunio, aerial acts Lea Hinz and Duo 19, veteran comedians Frank Ferrante and Joe DePaul and acrobatic dancers Mickael and Vita.

When: Ongoing

Where: Spiegeltent ZaZou on the 14th floor of the Cambria Hotel, 32 W. Randolph

Tickets: $119-$189; limited show only tickets $69. Visit zinzanni.com/chicago.

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Things to do in Chicago for theater and dance fansMary Houlihan – For the Sun-Timeson September 2, 2021 at 8:23 pm Read More »

Akbar Gbajabiamila named new co-host of ‘The Talk’Cydney Henderson | USA Todayon September 2, 2021 at 8:21 pm

The revolving door of co-hosts at “The Talk” continues to turn.

Just days after the show announced the departure of Elaine Welteroth, it is welcoming a new host, Akbar Gbajabiamila.

The TV host and former NFL player will be replacing Welteroth on Season 12 of the CBS daytime talk show (premiering Sept. 13), alongside co-hosts Sheryl Underwood, Amanda Kloots and Jerry O’Connell.

“It is an absolute honor to be joining THE TALK as a host!” Gbajabiamila said in a statement obtained by USA TODAY. “In a world as divided as ours, I look forward to showing up as my fun and authentic self every day and advocating for conversation over confrontation.”

Executive producer and showrunner Heather Gray added the show is “thrilled to welcome Akbar to the family.”

“His engaging personality, openness and quick wit really impressed us when he appeared as a guest co-host last season.”

Along with joining “The Talk,” Gbajabiamila is currently the host of NBC’s “American Ninja Warrior” and “American Ninja Warrior Junior,” and previously played five years in the NFL with the Oakland Raiders, San Diego Chargers and Miami Dolphins, before retiring in 2008.

On Tuesday, the show confirmed Welteroth was exiting “The Talk” after less than a year. Two weeks earlier, Carrie Ann Inaba announced her departure.

“It is an absolute honor for anyone, but especially a young Black woman, to occupy space on-air where our perspectives are largely underrepresented,” Welteroth, 34, said at the time in a statement obtained by USA TODAY.

She continued: “I’m proud of how I represented myself and my community. But as I always say: when the music changes, so must your dance! I will miss my talented co-hosts and crew and I wish them the very best. Thanks to all those who tuned in every day.”

The “More Than Enough” author and former editor-in-chief of Teen Vogue joined the show in January as Eve’s replacement. Welteroth is also a judge on Bravo’s “Project Runway.”

O’Connell joined “The Talk” in July as its first permanent male co-host to replace Sharon Osbourne, who left the show in March following a controversial on-air exchange about race with Underwood. Kloots joined the show in January, replacing Marie Osmond. Underwood, the longest tenured co-host, joined the show’s second season in 2011.

In a joint statement, Gray and Matthews said they are “grateful” for Welteroth’s contributions.

“We wish Elaine all the best,” the executive producers said. “We are grateful for her passion, enthusiasm, and insight she brought to the show daily. Her openness and meaningful conversations were attributes we admired and always appreciated.”

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Akbar Gbajabiamila named new co-host of ‘The Talk’Cydney Henderson | USA Todayon September 2, 2021 at 8:21 pm Read More »

Afternoon Edition: Sept. 2, 2021Matt Mooreon September 2, 2021 at 8:00 pm

Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.

This afternoon will be mostly sunny with a high near 78 degrees. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a low around 61. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy with a high near 77 and a 40% chance of showers.

Top story

Father killed while shielding young daughter from gunfire on West Side, family says. ‘She’s devastated that she watched her father get killed.’

Travell Miller’s last act before dying in an ambush on the West Side was shielding his 7-year-old daughter from gunfire and possibly saving her life, his family says.

“He was simply driving his daughter to school. He was talking to his mother [on the phone] as this guy runs up on the car,” Miller’s father Joseph Gilmore said today.

“His mother hears her son say, ‘Dang man, what the f—.’ She hears commotion and then hears him say, ‘Mama, Mama, I’ve been shot,'” Gilmore said.

Miller, 33, had been stopped in traffic around 7:30 a.m. yesterday in the 3000 block of West Chicago Avenue when the gunman got out of another car, walked up and opened fire, police said. He was hit four times and taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

The location of Miller’s wounds show he had bent over to protect his daughter, Gilmore said a doctor told him. “She’s traumatized. She’s devastated that she watched her father get killed.”

Police have released photos of the suspected attacker and the car he was driving, a silver two-door Grand Prix with no plates. “I pray that God serves them the same dish they gave my son,” Gilmore said.

Gilmore said detectives were investigating if the shooting stemmed from road rage. His family says they have no other idea why Miller would have been targeted, saying he had no enemies and had just moved to the neighborhood five days earlier.

David Struett has more on the tragic loss of Travell Miller here.

More news you need

A Chicago police lieutenant faces two felony charges, including one count of aggravated battery in the public way, for an on-duty incident that occurred in February 2021. Reporter Mitch Dudek has more on the charges facing the officer.

Chicago Teachers Union members are concerned about everything from managing crowds in schools to the rollout of COVID-19 testing, saying CPS is “duct-taping” together safety measures. The union says there are about 300 students and school employees who are in quarantine, but CPS has not said what it might take to close a school or the entire district.

If you’re in O’Hare Airport, you’ll soon have a whole new world of quick, touch-less shopping choices, thanks to concession agreements advanced today that aim to re-define vending machines. One of the new categories of vending machines will carry toddler-centric supplies like diapers, wipes and sippy cups for parents.

More than three dozen dogs and cats from Louisiana shelters in the direct path of Hurricane Ida arrived at PAWS Chicago yesterday afternoon. While some of the animals could be ready for foster homes in the coming days, others will be treated for heartworm and need up to three months to recover.

Chicago River users can now get a real-time look at water quality thanks to a new website that shows data from sensors installed in the river’s three main branches. The sensors are designed to continuously estimate the amount of bacteria in the water from human and other warm-blooded animals’ waste.

The Florida house that Al Capone owned for nearly two decades — and the place where he died — is facing demolition. Calling it a “piece of crap,” the new owners of the Miami Beach house plan to demolish it after buying it for $10.75 million this summer, the AP reports.

A bright one

In quest to find best hot dog in Chicago, local family creates their own, opens restaurant

Bobby Morelli and his 9-year-old daughter Brooklyn have long been on a quest to find the best hot dog in Chicago. They’ve visited all the classic spots in the city.

It’s a “cool” bond the father-daughter duo have, according to Brooklyn.

“I like the hot dogs that we search for,” the incoming fourth grader said. “But sometimes it’s not as good as the ones that my dad has.”

Morelli, with the help of Brooklyn and his wife Shy, and youngest daughter, opened The Hot Dog Box in August 2020 as a side project after the pandemic cut in half the client pool for his web design and marketing company.

Bobby Morelli, Founder of The Hot Dog Box, and his daughter Brooklyn. Brian Rich/Sun-Times

“I was looking for something that I could do myself that was fun, not a lot of stress, and we came across this particular box,” Morelli said as he gestured to his fire-engine red stand in Boxville, the city’s first shipping container marketplace located near the 51st Street Green Line station.

Morelli started serving classic Vienna Beef Chicago hot dogs last fall, but he always knew he wanted to create a menu that made him stand out from the rest. So, he closed up shop for a few months last winter and started to brainstorm on creating a signature dog.

“I just started to research different hot dog toppings, different things that we can do to just add the extra oomph. … So I said, let’s come up with a filet mignon steak hot dog,” Morelli said. “Nobody’s necessarily done that before that I know of here in the city of Chicago, and that would be something that I feel most people would be intrigued by.”

Morelli launched several variations of the filet mignon steak dogs in March, and they were a huge hit, especially the Bronzeville Bourbon Filet Mignon Steak Dog.

Madeline Kenney has more on the Morelli family’s creations — and their secret sauce — in her latest Dishin’ on the Dish installment here.

From the press box

Your daily question ?

If you could only pick one flavor of ice cream to eat for the rest of your life, what kind would it be? And from where?

Email us (please include your first name and where you live) and we might include your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

Yesterday we asked you: With the Chicago-set “Candyman” in theaters, we want to know: What’s the scariest movie you’ve ever seen in the theater? Here’s what some of you said…

“The original ‘Candyman’ with Tony Todd and Virginia Madsen was the one film I’ve seen in the theater which had me jumpy for a day or two afterward. I absolutely would not say the name even once, let alone three. And I distinctly remember checking over my shoulder a few times while in front of the mirror in my bathroom. A very close second would be ‘The Blair Witch Project. — Randy Volz

“‘Pet Cemetery 2.’ I snuck into the theater because I was underage and had to leave early because I couldn’t handle it. The security guard was on to me when I left the theater looking like I had just seen a ghost.’ — Shirlee Berman

“‘The Blair Witch Project.’ The entire theater reacted in unison. It was great.” — Frank Stafford

“‘Event Horizon.’ We went thinking it was just a space movie — great marketing ploy, because they got us, and scared the you-know-what out of us! Still love that movie.” — Eric Janzen

“‘The Exorcist.’ Opening night, dropped shrooms — I recovered in 1978.” — Brian Boyle

Thanks for reading the Chicago Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.

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Afternoon Edition: Sept. 2, 2021Matt Mooreon September 2, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »