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Ørkenoy is deserted no moreMike Sulaon October 27, 2022 at 6:33 pm

There are some 38 uninhabited islands in Norway,* and three in Humboldt Park. Of course, there are the two in the Lagoon, but these days Ørkenoy—the two-year-oldNordic-inspired brewery, cocktail bar, and restaurant—is “deserted” in name only. (The word is a rough mash-up of two Norwegian words: ørken, for desert, and oy, for island.)

But at its seemingly ill-timed opening, at the height of the pandemic, the threat that the seats in its bright, open confines—hard by the elevated Bloomingdale Trail greenway—would remain empty was very real to chef-partner Ryan Sanders. The name, he says, “was in relation to the fact that we are in a space still off the beaten path, the idea of the 606 as a current that would bring things to us. It was the question, ‘If you got to bring one thing to a desert island, what would it be?’ Our answer was beer.”

Sanders and his former partner, brewerJonny Ifergan, spent a year and a half building out the space in the Kimball Arts Center, planning to offer an alternative to the hoppy, IPA-dominant brewery scene: Scandinavian-inspired lagers and farmhouse ales to accompany Sanders’s nimble menu built around open-faced smørrebrød on dense sourdough rye rugbrød.

“When the pandemic happened, floors were torn out, plumbing was going in,” says Sanders, who’d previously cooked in the taproom at Lagunitas Brewing. “There was no slowing down at that point. We couldn’t stop if we wanted to. The bank wants its money. The landlord wants his rent.”

They’d opened in September 2020 with all the precautions and safety measures they could establish: reservations only, QR code menus, and rigorously minimal contact between staff and guests. “It was, from a service perspective, awful.” Six weeks later, the city shut everything down again, and Sanders and Ifergan had to lay off their entire staff, apart from brewer Briana Hestad.

Still, the space came to life as conditions relaxed. The following June they introduced biannual block parties and pop-up markets for independent, itinerant craft and food businesses, which was always part of the plan. “The very first one, of course, there was, like, a hurricane that day,” says Sanders. “We thought the building was going to flood, but this place was packed to the gills. There were still masks and we were still asking for vax cards and all that stuff, but people just wanted to be out. They just wanted something to do.”

The vibe is much less restrictive these days, though guests still order from their phones, and when Ifergan stepped away at theendof last year to start his own brewery, Hestad stepped up. Both the beer and Sanders’s menu began to evolve, and he’s just introduced a bunch of new fall dishes, highlighted by larger shareable plates and dishes that range far beyond northern European flavors.

Right now he’s braising pork ribs for 36 hours with Mick Klug plums, and shellacking them on the pickup with mezcal barbecue sauce. There’s a dino-sized lamb shank, barely clinging to the bone, drenched in an orange wine-spiked reduction of its braising liquid, its richness offset by a crunchy herb salad.

Credit: Ryan Sanders

These augment the portable smørrebrød and small bites core, which now features a dollop of chicken liver mousse atop a tiny apple cider donut with a drizzle of lingonberry glaze, which can serve as a kind of gateway organ for the offal adverse. He’s brought back brussels sprouts, this season seared in brown butter and glazed in cider-gochujang sauce, which ought not deter anyone weary of this menu standard. And some of the open-faced sandwiches have gone pretty far afield from the more traditional mainstays, like the Seitalian Stallion, a vegan riff on Italian beef—a “sacrilege,” jokes Sanders, with mushroom seitan drenched in a caramelized onion bechamel.

The bar is now fully open, serving luminous, fruit-forward cocktails, in addition to the drafts, which Hestad, who has a PhD in Scandinavian language, culture, and history, has scaled back from some of the more challenging smoked beers (though a very approachable one remains), in favor of lighter, refreshing, herbal-kissed brews like a farmhouse ale with lemon verbena and shiso, and a gooseberry wheat with lemon balm and sage.

Ørkenoy1757 N Kimball312-929-4024orkenoy.com

Ørkenoy continues to evolve into an ever more multifaceted concept, hosting Wednesday oyster nights, art exhibits, and dance parties, and selling a carefully curated selection of packaged goods out of its retail market. Friday, October 28, it’s staging an interactive beer blending dinner with Primary Colors, whose customizable brews are also produced on-site, and its next midwinter market featuring some two dozen-plus independent vendors is set for December 3.

In some ways the long, slow, organic easing out of isolation was good for the brewery. “It’s been an interesting few years for everyone,” says Sanders. “I like the box because then you can bounce off the walls and find something to create with what you have. We don’t have a wealth of resources, but the silver lining was everybody brought something to the desert island and we got to create with what we have.”

*so says Wikipedia

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Ørkenoy is deserted no moreMike Sulaon October 27, 2022 at 6:33 pm Read More »

Sarah Shook turns from outlaw country to dark, rootsy pop with the new project Mightmare

Sarah Shook is best known as the singer and guitarist for rowdy country band Sarah Shook & the Disarmers, but Cruel Liars, the debut album from their latest project, the darker and more intimate Mightmare, proves that pigeonholing them would be a grave mistake. Shook grew up in a fundamentalist Christian household where their exposure to music was limited to classical and religious styles, but in their late teens a friend turned them on to secular music and they became enamored with indie rock. After relocating from the northeast to North Carolina, they found their stride as a country musician, naming their first band Sarah Shook & the Devil as a tongue-in-cheek nod to their pious upbringing. By then, they were a divorced, single parent in their early 20s, working several jobs to make ends meet while gigging on the side. With the Disarmers, launched in 2014, Shook has poured their rebellious spirit and hardscrabble wisdom into three albums of effusive, outlaw country music that elicits a smile as often as a tear in the proverbial beer—most recently with Nightroamer, which came out on Thirty Tigers in February. 

If it weren’t already clear that Shook has a knack for reinvention, Cruel Liars provides ample evidence. They began working on the material in the pandemic lockdown of early 2020 and wound up writing, recording, and producing the record at home, playing all the instruments (with the exception of a handful of bass tracks by Aaron Oliva). More bedroom than barroom, Cruel Liars grapples with heartache, loss, and self-discovery in intricate tunes that merge Shook’s indie-rock influences with dark, stripped-down Americana and pop. While the record is most powerful in its most intense moments, such as the driving, shadowy “Enemy,” the whole thing is made more compelling by Shook’s characteristically sharp lyrics and richly layered vocal harmonies. Mightmare doesn’t sound like the Disarmers, but Shook’s ability to mine something universal from intimate thoughts and tales connects them at their core. The strength of this first release already makes an urgent question of where Shook will take the project from here.

Mightmare Sun 10/30, 8:30 PM, Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western, $15 ($12 in advance), 21+


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Sarah Shook turns from outlaw country to dark, rootsy pop with the new project Mightmare Read More »

Pick up a print copy of this week’s Chicago Reader

The Reader is published in print every other week and distributed free to the 1,100 locations on this map (which can also be opened in a separate window or tab). Copies are available free of charge—while supplies last.

Distribution map

The latest issue

The most recent print issue is this week’s issue of October 27, 2022. It is being distributed to locations today, Wednesday, October 26, through tomorrow, Thursday, October 27.

Download a free PDF of the print issue.

Vote 2022 section inside: Injustice Watch’s guide to the Cook County judicial elections (PDF)(The special pullout section comes with print issues, in the full issue PDF, and is also available as a separate PDF download.)

Many Reader boxes including downtown and transit line locations will be restocked on the Wednesday following each issue date.

The next issue

The next print issue is the issue of November 10. It will be distributed to locations Wednesday, November 9, through Thursday night, November 10.

Never miss a copy! Paid print subscriptions are available for 12 issues, 26 issues, and for 52 issues from the Reader Store.

Chicago Reader 2022 print issue dates

The Chicago Reader is published in print every other week. Issues are dated Thursday. Distribution usually happens Wednesday morning through Thursday night of the issue date. Upcoming print issue dates through December 2022 are:

11/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

Download the full 2022 editorial calendar is here (PDF).

See our information page for advertising opportunities.

2023 print issue dates

The first print issue in 2023 will be published three weeks after the 12/22/2022 issue, the final issue of 2022. The print issue dates through June 2023 are:

1/12/20231/26/20232/9/20232/23/20233/9/20233/23/20234/6/20234/20/20235/4/20235/18/20236/1/20236/15/20236/29/2023

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Healing, music, and love

Healing is often a long and winding process. Try as we might to pretend that we have it under control, healing is usually messy and nonlinear. But even when all seems lost, there are moments that remind us that the light at the end of the tunnel is still worth venturing toward.  

South side rapper Freddie Old Soul’s healing process began when she picked up a pen and expressed herself creatively. She also credits music for helping her find God. That discovery led to digging deeper into spirituality, following a West African tradition known as Ifa, and becoming a trained healer.

“I started to go to herbal school with an organization called Gold Water Alchemy, and I just naturally became a woman healer before I knew it. I was doing healing circles to help women get through very traumatic experiences that have happened to them,” she said with pride. “When I say I help heal women, it’s more so about ‘what are the tools that God gave you? And how can you best utilize those tools to be the best version of yourself?’ So that’s my gift back to the community.”

Freddie’s healing work goes hand in hand with her music. She refined her craft as a spoken word poet at the Young Chicago Authors program Louder Than a Bomb (LTAB, since renamed the Rooted & Radical Youth Poetry Festival). That later translated into musical projects. Her lyricism invokes messages of inner work and self-love over mellow boom-bap production. It’s smooth and easy to listen to, allowing you to truly absorb every word she spits. The end result is alchemized gold.

“Writing poetry, being a part of LTAB, and literally sometimes even locking myself up in my room until I just got the words out of me—I would discover more about myself,” she said. “That’s why music is so important to me, because without it I just wouldn’t be able to self-reflect the way that I do. A lot of the times I rap about something and then like three months to a year later, it’s literally happening to me. I had to get through it because I wrote about it. So it’s magic, kinda, in a way.”

Freddie’s upcoming album Water, Music, and Love focuses on the transitional period of her life as a mother and her journey to rediscover herself as a musician. The title represents the three things that she says are essential to her well-being. The project’s genesis came from making music every day in her living room with her close friends and collaborators JazStarr and _Stepchild, which was a healing process in and of itself. 

With the album, Freddie Old Soul looks to claim her place among Chicago’s pantheon of great rappers, something she humbly but firmly believes she’s worthy of already.

“I think the people have been waiting on me to realize how much of an impact I truly make. I think when we name people like Mother Nature, Semiratruth, and Brittney Carter, these are my friends,” she says with earnest. “These people are reflections of me and they’ve come into my life and reminded me, like, ‘Freddie, you the coldest.’ I feel the community, and the people are waiting on me to be the impact that I know that I always have been.”

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Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Healing, music, and love Read More »

Up in smoke

In 2020, when Illinois legalized recreational marijuana sales, its process for dispensing licenses included a promise to favor “social equity” applicants—businesses that are at least 51 percent owned by someone who (or whose family member) had a prior cannabis conviction, and businesses that planned to hire people with such convictions. Moncheri Robinson and her family jumped at the opportunity. 

Three years and tens of thousands of dollars later, the family still doesn’t have a license.  

Robinson and four family members emptied their savings to pay a team of legal writers $85,000 to craft a competitive application for the first round of applications. They also paid $2,500 for the application fee. Multiple applicants the Reader spoke to also described spending upwards of $100,000 for similar services.

Robinson and her family felt confident about their odds. Their writers had recently won other competitive markets in Arkansas and Oklahoma, which are similar to how Illinois is set up, and the family assumed their social equity designation would give them a leg up. 

“We’re literally everyday people,” Robinson said. “My aunt was a store clerk; my husband, a school teacher, so I work in student affairs in higher ed . . . my cousin is a nurse, my brother is a nurse.” She said it was understood that if you weren’t able to qualify for social equity, you weren’t gonna win. 

Their business concept was designed to resemble a gas station, carrying the items one would expect at a convenience store, plus dank bud. They submitted their application in January 2020, and waited. 

“I’ll never forget checking that email every single day,” Robinson said. “And it was September 3, 2020. I’m on the Dan Ryan . . . and I’ll never forget [when] that email came through. And gosh, I just remember just reading it over and over, I was shaking so bad. Thank God, I wasn’t driving and my husband was. We didn’t see our name on that list. It was just like, ‘Wait a minute. This can’t be happening.’ Like, ‘I know we had a good application.’”

Frustrated, Robinson responded to the email to request her application’s score—the total number of points awarded based on criteria such as the planned facilities, employee training plans, security and product safety, and social equity status, which gave qualified applicants an additional 50 points out of a maximum 250. 

Her family’s application hadn’t been allotted the 50 social equity points, nor had it gotten points for being an Illinois-based business. “I’m not a sore loser,” Robinson said, “but it’s another thing to get cheated. . . . It was basic, surface-level mistakes in the grading.”

In February 2021, following litigation and protests, state regulators allowed applicants to submit supplemental information and request their applications be reevaluated. Robinson’s recalculated score was 245 points, a near-perfect application, and qualified for the lottery. When the day of the lottery came, Robinson said that to her confusion, bigger companies were able to submit multiple applications and obtain more chances in the lottery; one such company, Cresco Labs, won three dispensary licenses. 

Ultimately, Robinson’s family did not win a dispensary license, and she expressed frustration that this process was stacked against social equity applicants who didn’t have hundreds of thousands of dollars to submit multiple applications. “If you were truly social equity, could you truly afford to stuff the box with essentially 100 applications at $2,500 a whop?”

On September 27—the first bitterly cold morning of fall—an alliance of social-equity business owners and cannabis advocates held a press conference outside the governor’s West Loop high-rise to demand immediate relief for businesses that were awarded social equity licenses in the past year. Such businesses have 180 days to begin operations, after which the state may revoke their licenses. The social equity license winners described the struggles they’ve encountered in meeting that deadline. 

The speakers shivered in the brisk weather as they described feeling unsupported by the state. Licensees floundered to compete with multistate operations (MSOs)—large cannabis companies like Cresco, many of whom profited early from medical marijuana sales and have more cash than small business owners to pay for recreational applications and navigate the state’s expensive and arduous hurdles. 

In an interview with the Reader, Paul Pearson, who created the first Illinois Cannabis Law program with the City of Chicago Colleges and is currently running for 4th Ward alderperson, explained that MSOs saturate the licensing process by submitting many applications. MSOs can also afford lobbyists to advocate on their behalf. And, under state guidelines, these companies can qualify as social equity applicants if they hire employees from areas disproportionately impacted by cannabis arrests. 

Kalee Hooghkirk, a partner at a small business licensed to infuse products with distilled THC, said the state must mandate pricing controls for the distillate MSOs sell to infusers. “The same multistate operators who have lobbied against our interests and delayed this program are the same ones we are being asked to depend on for the very core of our business,” Hooghkirk said. “Infusers are being asked to pay $20,000 for liters [of distillate] that cost four to $7,000 in states with similar programs. “

Lisbeth Vargas Jaimes, the executive director of the Illinois Independent Craft Growers Association, said the state’s canopy rules, which limit the square footage of grow operations, “are the reason why there aren’t many financial opportunities afforded to social equity businesses in this market.”

Craft growers currently can only grow a maximum of 5,000 square feet of cannabis; the association is asking for that maximum to be upped to 14,000 square feet. Jordan Melendez, an organizer with the Southwest Side Coalition for Change, said canopy limitations force small business owners to give a large percentage of ownership to financiers. 

Debt financing options in the cannabis industry are often punitively priced, Melendez said. 

CREDIT: Ruby Thorkelson

Willie “J.R.” Fleming, representing the Southwest Side of Chicago Couriers, spoke on behalf of those with transportation license grievances. He urged the governor to delay the release of new transportation licenses until the current licensees can find business. “The existing multistate operators in Illinois have not produced opportunities in the contract for transporters to be successful,” Fleming said in an interview with the Reader. “It is imperative that legislation include a requirement for existing cultivators to contract with a transportation licensee for at least 75 percent of their business.”

At the press conference, speakers also said  that the Department of Commerce & Economic Opportunity loan program created to assist small businesses has yet to release any of the funds. One speaker noted that there are too many stipulations on the money regardless. The funds can only be used to be “operational,” but many businesses need the money for construction or for acquisition.

Former state senator Rickey Hendon and State representative La Shawn Ford spoke last. 

“The governor, who I love, needs to know what we’re going through,” Hendon said. “We wouldn’t be out here freezing our ass off if this wasn’t serious. We’re asking for an additional 180 days for true social equity. . . . Because if you don’t open in 180 days, you’ll lose your license. They set us up for failure, and they don’t even know it.”

“These are not nonprofit entities,” said Ford, who was in his shirtsleeves despite the bracing cold. “These are business people that have put their life savings on the line in order to help the state, reduce unemployment, and rebuild communities.”

Fleming co-owns several cannabis equity companies in Illinois, including Public Square LLC and South and West Side Carriers LLC. 

Fleming said he strategically partnered with different cannabis companies and teams to submit multiple applications. He won a dispensary license with Justice Grown, run by two civil rights law partners in Chicago.

He sold weed in his younger days in the Chicago “legacy,” or underground, market. He said he’s been arrested and charged with multiple counts of possession with intent to deliver cannabis, but never convicted. “That’s the legal way to say I was selling weed,” he laughed. When he heard the state was legalizing medical marijuana in 2013, he started organizing to prepare his people to participate in the market.

Fleming and his teammates were awarded transportation, cultivation, and infusion licenses in Illinois, but he spoke on behalf of transportation because it’s the license he hasn’t been able to monetize. Ironically, these licenses have the lowest application fees and need the least additional infrastructure and partners to monetize.

But Fleming said they’re the least valuable licenses right now because you must transport marijuana from a legal Illinois entity, and the big MSOs will not give anyone a contract to begin. “You’d be a fool to believe that they’re gonna give you a contract,” he chuckled, “You really think these white people gonna let you move they drugs?”

As a social equity business owner, he said that it’s hard to find locations on the southwest side because those facilities don’t exist there already, and his team doesn’t have the capital to build them. The only people in this industry who would lend money to cannabis start-ups are hedge funds and other financial interests, he said. To try to lessen the widespread dependence on white investors, Fleming has reached out to Black athletes and Black entertainers to invest. 

“There should be more opportunities and resources put forth by the government to support social equity winners,” he said. “We feel like the city [and] the state, they should be providing the same resources that they do for big corporations coming to Illinois, to social equity winners.”

CREDIT: Ruby Thorkelson

Elijah Hamilton is the CEO and Founder of Chummy’s Organix, a Chicago-based cannabidiol (CBD, a legal, nonpsychoactive by-product of cannabis) brand. “That’s the one that’s actually functioning, up and running right now,” Hamilton said. “And then I have Chummy’s Edibles, which was the brand that we attempted to get into the mainstream cannabis market . . . we went through that whole tumultuous process back in 2020. You know, going through the rush of trying to get into the game, so to speak.”

Long before being a business owner, Hamilton worked in the consumer packaged goods industry for a decade as a district manager of PepsiCo and Frito-Lay. “That’s pretty much where I got most of my skills from . . . market strategy, direct store delivery, how to IRI data, Nelson statistics planograms, how to structure route delivery.” By the time he considered making a dime off the cannabis industry, he was nearly bankrupt. A former friend showed him how to make edibles, and he started selling those casually to help him get back on his feet.

“I got pretty good at it. And then when I found Illinois was about to become recreational, we had decided, ‘Hey, let’s go ahead, start out.’”

Hamilton vertically integrated his company with seven others, and Chummy’s was the flagship brand because it already had recognition due to its success in the legacy market. But he said that once he saw how the state was dealing with the first round of dispensary licenses, he decided to pivot and start a CBD brand just in case it didn’t happen. 

“Turns out I was right.”

Hamilton ultimately left the dispensary license application process because Illinois kept adding stipulations. He found the cost of writing and submitting a social equity application—which he said could be more than $100,000—unreasonably high.

He added that commercial property owners have raised rents by thousands of dollars after learning spaces would be used as a cannabis kitchen or for a craft grower. And businesses require aldermanic approval before they can set up a dispensary. As he watched people around him go bankrupt in hopes of creating generational wealth, Hamilton pivoted to developing his CBD brand. 

“I didn’t want to throw all my eggs in one basket,” he said, “and then just kind of be left holding nothing.”

Since applying, both Robinson and Hamilton have become advocates with the Social Equity Empowerment Network (SEEN), which serves the Black community nationally by helping cannabis sellers move from the legacy to the legal market. Robinson has also worked to change state laws to prevent their experiences from being replicated. Hamilton uses his business as a model for other legacy businesses to move into the mainstream market. “The goal is to get [them] above ground,” he said. 

Robinson lives in Virginia now. She joined a few fruitless class-action lawsuits against the state of Illinois before moving there. She says the Illinois market is too unstable for her to encourage anyone to get involved now. “They’ve been guessing this whole process,” she said. “They’ve been putting pieces in place in real time instead of having these things in place prior” to opening the application process. 

Sometimes she regrets that she wasn’t able to afford more applications, but she comes back to the fact that her business may not have gotten the necessary governmental support to succeed regardless. “These people still out here having press conferences with the governor, that’s like the fifth press conference that they done had, to petition the governor to do something to continue to fix our open wounds with a Band-Aid.”

The process caused friction between her and her family members, and one of her family members who invested $20,000 while close to retirement won’t speak to her anymore. 

“To not even have a relationship with truly one of my favorite [family members] in the world is hurtful,” Robinson said. “They don’t understand the devastation that they brought to just not only individuals, but families.”


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Up in smoke Read More »

Sarah Shook turns from outlaw country to dark, rootsy pop with the new project MightmareJamie Ludwigon October 27, 2022 at 5:00 pm

Sarah Shook is best known as the singer and guitarist for rowdy country band Sarah Shook & the Disarmers, but Cruel Liars, the debut album from their latest project, the darker and more intimate Mightmare, proves that pigeonholing them would be a grave mistake. Shook grew up in a fundamentalist Christian household where their exposure to music was limited to classical and religious styles, but in their late teens a friend turned them on to secular music and they became enamored with indie rock. After relocating from the northeast to North Carolina, they found their stride as a country musician, naming their first band Sarah Shook & the Devil as a tongue-in-cheek nod to their pious upbringing. By then, they were a divorced, single parent in their early 20s, working several jobs to make ends meet while gigging on the side. With the Disarmers, launched in 2014, Shook has poured their rebellious spirit and hardscrabble wisdom into three albums of effusive, outlaw country music that elicits a smile as often as a tear in the proverbial beer—most recently with Nightroamer, which came out on Thirty Tigers in February. 

If it weren’t already clear that Shook has a knack for reinvention, Cruel Liars provides ample evidence. They began working on the material in the pandemic lockdown of early 2020 and wound up writing, recording, and producing the record at home, playing all the instruments (with the exception of a handful of bass tracks by Aaron Oliva). More bedroom than barroom, Cruel Liars grapples with heartache, loss, and self-discovery in intricate tunes that merge Shook’s indie-rock influences with dark, stripped-down Americana and pop. While the record is most powerful in its most intense moments, such as the driving, shadowy “Enemy,” the whole thing is made more compelling by Shook’s characteristically sharp lyrics and richly layered vocal harmonies. Mightmare doesn’t sound like the Disarmers, but Shook’s ability to mine something universal from intimate thoughts and tales connects them at their core. The strength of this first release already makes an urgent question of where Shook will take the project from here.

Mightmare Sun 10/30, 8:30 PM, Empty Bottle, 1035 N. Western, $15 ($12 in advance), 21+


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Sarah Shook turns from outlaw country to dark, rootsy pop with the new project MightmareJamie Ludwigon October 27, 2022 at 5:00 pm Read More »

White Sox rumors: Ozzie Guillen gaining steam in manager searchJordan Campbellon October 27, 2022 at 5:20 pm

The Chicago White Sox presumably have 24 hours to name a new manager before they likely would need to wait until after the World Series concludes to make an official announcement.

The Major League Baseball World Series between the Houston Astros and Philadelphia Phillies is set to begin on Friday evening and teams are advised not to make any official announcements during the World Series in an effort to ensure that the focus is on the two teams that are playing.

Interestingly enough, there are two candidates from the Astros’ and Phillies’ coaching staff that may be in consideration for the White Sox managerial gig.

Astros’ bench coach Joe Espada is believed to have interviewed for the position while Phillies hitting coach Kevin Long would be an ideal candidate for the position as well.

If Espada or Long are finalists for the position, that would lend credence as to why the White Sox have not named a manager while teams such as the Texas Rangers and Miami Marlins have already named their new managers.

Or, it could be that the White Sox were waiting on a meeting of the minds to take place between 2005 World Series manager Ozzie Guillen and team chairman Jerry Reinsdorf to take place.

In a radio hit with KNXO in Iowa, NBC Sports Chicago insider David Kaplan reported that Guillen recently met with Reinsdorf to clear the air regarding the end of Guillen’s first stint as the White Sox manager in 2010.

The White Sox traded Guillen to the Miami Marlins after consecutive years of friction between the manager and the team’s front office.

Kaplan indicated that the meeting between Guillen and Reinsdorf went well and the silence from Guillen’s camp may indicate that there is a real chance that he returns to the manager’s helm for the White Sox.

In reference to Guillen potentially being named the White Sox manager for a second time, Major League Baseball insider Jon Heyman questioned the idea while speaking with “The Mully and Haugh Show” on Thursday morning but did indicate that Reinsdorf may want Guillen for the job.

No guarantees that @OzzieGuillen won’t get the #WhiteSox job, I think the owner wants him. But again my opinion is odd choice says @JonHeyman

Listen https://t.co/QNqhdQR7By pic.twitter.com/rmbVrSZApP

— Mully And Haugh (@mullyhaugh) October 27, 2022

Ozzie Guillen is gaining steam to become the manager of the Chicago White Sox.

If Guillen does become the White Sox manager, this would mark the second consecutive. managerial hire in which the final decision was made by the owner and not the general manager.

Reinsdorf wanted to correct a previous wrong in 2020 when he hired Tony La Russa despite general manager Rick Hahn wanting AJ Hinch, and he could have a similar idea in mind with the preference for Guillen to return to the White Sox organization as the team’s manager.

Guillen would be an interesting choice for the White Sox considering another hire where the organization opted to go with a familiar face as opposed to a candidate in Espada that clearly has a future in baseball as a manager.

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White Sox rumors: Ozzie Guillen gaining steam in manager searchJordan Campbellon October 27, 2022 at 5:20 pm Read More »

Fantasy basketball tips and NBA betting picks for Thursdayon October 27, 2022 at 5:47 pm

Christian Wood has provided a spark to a Mavericks team that has started the 2022-23 season hot and faces a struggling Nets team on Thursday night. AP Photo/Tony Gutierre

ESPN’s fantasy basketball and basketball betting tips cheat sheet is your pregame destination for basketball betting predictions and our best intel and data to help you make smart fantasy and wagering decisions. NBA game odds for October 27 are provided by Caesars Sportsbook, and fantasy advice is based on ESPN 10-team leagues.

What you need to know for Thursday’s games

Fatigue?: The Nets were 3-11 outright (5-9 ATS) on the second night of back-to-backs a season ago and are in their first such spot this season tonight- (they have two more over the next 17 days). Under tickets cashed in nine of those 14 games and the Nets team total was a worthwhile target (106.9 PPG). It’s early, but Kevin Durant has as many turnovers this season as assists and has yet to shoot better than 33.3% from deep in a game.

Giddey for Mann: Josh Giddey (ankle) will miss his second consecutive game and that sound you hear is the elation of Tre Mann‘s fantasy managers (or savvy prop bettors). On Tuesday against the Clippers, Mann fired 24 times from the field in his 36 minutes, a per minute shot rate that was 54.9% greater than his three games to open this season. The Clips have allowed at least 108 points in three straight games, so if the Thunder can continue to push the pace like they have thus far, Mann could be in for another high usage evening.

Checking The Temperature: Jordan Poole entered this season with a reputation as an instant offense type of player that could fill it up in a hurry. That’s still true, but he’s quietly added play-making to his bag of tricks, something roto fantasy managers and prop bettors alike have to be loving. The 23-year-old is averaging an assist for every two shots taken this season, nearly double his career rate entering this season. Does it sustain? Tough to say, but we will get a good look at if these gains are real tonight against a Heat team that is top-10 in defensive efficiency since the beginning of last season.

Stackramento: The winless Kings host the surging Grizzlies in Sacramento this evening in a contest that claims the highest total of the slate (236.5). Memphis ranks sixth in offensive rating, but also last in offensive rating thanks to getting drubbed by Dallas last weekend. The Kings, meanwhile, are sixth in pace and 21st in defensive rating, adding even more possessions to this fantasy-friendly setup. Stacking DFS lineups with both of these defensively-deficient rosters makes some sense amid a four-game slate. With Ja Morant, Domantas Sabonis, and De’Aaron Fox as high-ceiling building blocks, complementary shares of Keegan Murray, Kevin Huerter, Desmond Bane, and even Santi Aldama could prove rewarding. For those seeking some streaming options, Huerter (53% available in ESPN leagues) has seen his 3-point volume leap by 48.2% since last season with Atlanta, while Aldama (76%) is playing heavy minutes and producing a nice blend of blocks and boards for the Grizzlies.

— Jim McCormick and Kyle Soppe

Game of the night

Dallas Mavericks at Brooklyn Nets7:30 p.m. ET, Barclays Center, Brooklyn, New York

Line: Nets (-2.5)Money line: Mavericks (-145), Nets (+122)Total: 225 pointsBPI Projected Total: 233.6 pointsBPI Win%: Mavericks (58.7%)

Questionable: Tim Hardaway Jr. (foot), Markieff Morris (personal)Ruled out: Seth Curry (ankle), Davis Bertans (knee), Frank Ntilikina (ankle)Note: BPI numbers factored in players who are ruled out but assumes questionable players will play

Fantasy streamer: Royce O’Neale (available in 80.5% of leagues) is making a consistent 3-and-D impact. He’s averaging 3.5 combined steals and blocks per game, plus 2.3 3-pointers per game, and has at least two stocks and a 3-pointer in every game this season. — Andr? Snellings

2 Related

Best Bet: Christian Wood over 18.5 points. The Mavericks’ offense rests almost solely on Luka Doncic, Christian Wood and Spencer Dinwiddie. Betting the over-stack (e.g. over points on all three of them) has been successful so far this season, but for Wood specifically, it doesn’t appear that Vegas has caught up to his role with his new team. In three games thus far, he’s scored 25, 25 and 23 points; he’s getting plenty of shots as the primary option in the second unit and main scoring lieutenant when Luka is on the court. — Snellings

Breaking down the rest of the slate

LA Clippers at Oklahoma City Thunder8:00 p.m ET, Paycom Center, Oklahoma City

Line: Clippers (-6)Money line: Clippers (-250), Thunder (+205)Total: 218.5 pointsBPI Projected Total: 222.7 pointsBPI Win%: Clippers (58%)

Questionable: Paul George (illness)Ruled out: Kawhi Leonard (knee), Marcus Morris Sr. (personal), Josh Giddey (ankle), Jalen Williams (eye)Note: BPI numbers factored in players who are ruled out but assumes questionable players will play

Best bet: Clippers -6. In the first game of a back-to-back set, the Clippers lost to the Thunder. However, Los Angeles was without Kawhi Leonard and Paul George. Leonard, who has stiffness in his knee, has already been ruled out. While George is questionable with an illness for tonight’s game, there is a strong chance he will play. The Clippers do not want to lose consecutive games to the Thunder. My bet is on Los Angeles to cover. The Thunder aren’t a strong offensive team ranking 27th in points scored per 100 possessions played. This season, Oklahoma City allows opponents to have an effective field goal percentage of 54.1%. — Eric Moody

Memphis Grizzlies at Sacramento Kings10 p.m. ET, Golden One Center, Sacramento, California

Line: Grizzlies (-3)Money line: Grizzlies (-165), Kings (+140)Total: 237 pointsBPI Projected Total: 236.6 pointsBPI Win%: Grizzlies (52.5%)

Questionable: John Konchar (shoulder)Ruled out: Ziaire Williams (knee)Note: BPI numbers factored in players who are ruled out but assumes questionable players will play

Fantasy streamer: Santi Aldama (rostered in 23.2%) is a great streamer against the Kings. He’s averaged 12.8 PPG, 7.5 RPG and 1.3 BPG in 30.8 MPG this season and scored 30 or more fantasy points in three out of four games. The Kings rank 22nd in points allowed per 100 possessions, which also helps the cause. — Eric Moody

Best bet: Keegan Murray over 16.5 points. Murray has averaged 17.5 PPG in his first two NBA games, coming off the bench but getting plenty of minutes. He’s moving into the starting lineup on Thursday, and while his minutes can’t realistically get much higher, this vote of confidence also gets him out on the court with playmakers that can get him more open looks. Murray showed me in the Las Vegas Summer League that he’s ready to be a professional scorer in the NBA right now, and he has a quickness advantage on Santi Aldama that should allow him to be aggressive as a scorer in his first start. — Snellings

Miami Heat at Golden State Warriors10:00 p.m ET, Chase Center, San Francisco

Line: Warriors (-6.5)Money line: Warriors (-260), Heat (+210)Total: 227 pointsBPI Projected Total: 227.9 pointsBPI Win%: Warriors (67.7%)

Ruled out: Andre Iguodala (hip), Donte DiVincenzo (hamstring), Omer Yurtseven (ankle), Victor Oladipo (knee)Note: BPI numbers factored in players who are ruled out but assumes questionable players will play

Fantasy streamer: James Wiseman (available in 65.4% of leagues) has proven than he can produce efficiently even in limited minutes off the bench. Wiseman has scored in double figures in three straight games, and is averaging 11.3 PPG, 5.3 RPG and 0.8 BPG in 17.8 MPG on the season. As part of the second unit, he should also pretty much avoid Bam Adebayo, and Wiseman’s physical tools should allow him to get the better of Dewayne Dedmon and the otherwise undersized Heat frontline. — Snellings

Best bet: Andrew Wiggins over 25.5 points + assists + rebounds. This season, Wiggins averages 20.8 PPG, 6.3 RPG, 2.8 APG, 2.0 SPG, and 1.3 BPG in 32.3 MPG. For the season, he has a usage rate of 21.7% and faces a Heat defense that has been torched by small forwards. Miami has allowed 28.3 PPG, 4.05 APG and 8.7 RPG to the position. — Eric Moody

Analytics Edge

BPI’s highest projected totals

1. Memphis Grizzlies (118.7 points)2. Dallas Mavericks (118.0 points)3. Sacramento Kings (117.9 points)

BPI’s lowest projected totals

1. Oklahoma City Thunder (110.2 points)2. Miami Heat (111.6 points)3. Brooklyn Nets (115.6 points)

BPI top probability to win (straight up)

1. Golden State Warriors (66.7%)2. Dallas Mavericks (58.7%)3. LA Clippers (58.0%)

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Fantasy basketball tips and NBA betting picks for Thursdayon October 27, 2022 at 5:47 pm Read More »

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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. 

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


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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 27, 2022 at 7:01 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.


MAGA flip-flops

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


Just like we told you

The Bears finally make their play for public money to build their private stadium.


The choice is yours, voters

MAGA’s Illinois Supreme Court nominees are poised to outlaw abortion in Illinois—if, gulp, they win.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon October 27, 2022 at 7:01 am Read More »