What’s New

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:

10/27/202211/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

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

Related


The City of Chicago Commits to Advertising Equity in Local Media

Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot signs an Executive Order allocating at least 50 percent of all City departments’ annual advertising spending to community media outlets


Enrique Limón named Editor in Chief of Chicago Reader

Limón will start October 3.


[PRESS RELEASE] Baim stepping down as Reader publisher end of 2022

Read More

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

Pick up a print copy of this week’s Chicago ReaderChicago Readeron October 27, 2022 at 4:08 am

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:

10/27/202211/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

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

Related


The City of Chicago Commits to Advertising Equity in Local Media

Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot signs an Executive Order allocating at least 50 percent of all City departments’ annual advertising spending to community media outlets


Enrique Limón named Editor in Chief of Chicago Reader

Limón will start October 3.


[PRESS RELEASE] Baim stepping down as Reader publisher end of 2022

Read More

Pick up a print copy of this week’s Chicago ReaderChicago Readeron October 27, 2022 at 4:08 am 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:

10/27/202211/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

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

Related


The City of Chicago Commits to Advertising Equity in Local Media

Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot signs an Executive Order allocating at least 50 percent of all City departments’ annual advertising spending to community media outlets


Enrique Limón named Editor in Chief of Chicago Reader

Limón will start October 3.


[PRESS RELEASE] Baim stepping down as Reader publisher end of 2022

Read More

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

Pick up a print copy of this week’s Chicago ReaderChicago Readeron October 26, 2022 at 10:16 pm

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:

10/27/202211/10/202211/24/202212/8/202212/22/2022

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

Related


The City of Chicago Commits to Advertising Equity in Local Media

Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot signs an Executive Order allocating at least 50 percent of all City departments’ annual advertising spending to community media outlets


Enrique Limón named Editor in Chief of Chicago Reader

Limón will start October 3.


[PRESS RELEASE] Baim stepping down as Reader publisher end of 2022

Read More

Pick up a print copy of this week’s Chicago ReaderChicago Readeron October 26, 2022 at 10:16 pm Read More »

Celts’ Williams suspended for contact with officialon October 26, 2022 at 11:28 pm

BOSTON — Celtics forward Grant Williams was suspended for one game without pay for using inappropriate language and “recklessly making contact with” a referee, the NBA said Wednesday.

The league said he will serve the suspension on Friday night when Boston hosts the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Williams was given a technical foul and then ejected in the fourth quarter of the Celtics’ 120-102 loss at Chicago on Monday night after he was called for an offensive blocking foul while defending Zach LaVine.

He jumped in protest, aggressively walking away from the court and over to the sideline just in front of the first row of fans. As he walked over to the fans, he also made what crew chief Marc Davis told a pool reporter after the game was “intentional physical contact” with referee Cheryl Flores.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Read More

Celts’ Williams suspended for contact with officialon October 26, 2022 at 11:28 pm Read More »

A threesome is probably safer than a shower

Q: Can someone be both homosexual and asexual? I can’t wrap my brain around this one.

A: Sure, a person can be asexual while also being homosexual . . . because asexuality is a spectrum, and that spectrum is broad and vast and includes people who experience sexual attraction and sometimes choose to act on their sexual attraction. Basically, some asexual guys want boyfriends but don’t wanna fuck ’em at all, other asexual guys want boyfriends but don’t wanna fuck ’em much. It’s really not that confusing . . . unless you happen to be dating a guy who either doesn’t know he’s asexual or knows it and hasn’t told you, in which case you’re likely to be as confused as you are frustrated.

Q: I’m a recently divorced 53-year-old bi-curious woman living on the East Coast. I was with my ex for most of my life and he never mentioned this, but since I have begun dating, each new partner has told me how tight I am. You would think this was a good thing! I recently began dating a man who says he loves how tight I am. However, he also says it is making him come quickly. His marriage recently ended too, so he hasn’t had a lot of sexual experience either. So, I don’t know if he just comes quickly or if it’s because of me. Do you have any suggestions?

A: Maybe it’s you—maybe it’s that you’re tight (which most men regard as a good thing)—or maybe he’s a premature ejaculator and he’d rather blame you than admit to it. Either way, don’t let him stick his dick in you until after he’s made you come at least once.

Q: Why do all the gay guys in my age group—guys I like—not want me? And why do only a few men above my age group—guys I also like—want me?

A: It’s a mystery—a mystery best pondered sitting on the dick of an older guy who wanted you and got you.

Q: Any tips for safe sex during threesomes? Thinking about having a MFF threesome! 

A: There’s no such thing as safe sex, there’s only safer sex. To be completely safe, skip the threesome, stay home, and take a nice, long, relaxing bath instead. Or not. According to the CDC, every year a quarter of a million people wind up in the emergency room after a fall in the bathroom and thousands more never make it to the ER because they DIED naked, wet, and alone after falling out of their tubs. Meanwhile, fewer than 50,000 people are diagnosed with primary and secondary syphilis annually. So, you’re probably safer at that threesome—provided you don’t shower before or after it. Or ever again. (Full disclosure: Almost 700,000 people got gonorrhea in 2020 and 1.5 million people got chlamydia.)

As for making the sex safer, get tested, share your STI statuses, and use condoms. (Condoms, when correctly used, will protect you from syphilis, gonorrhea, chlamydia, HIV, and pregnancy.) Basically, follow the same risk-reduction strategies you would follow for a twosome—with one addition: if M wants to fuck both Fs, he needs to change condoms each time he swaps holes. And to make your threesome emotionally safer, all three of you should be clear about what you do and don’t want, and everyone should agree—out loud—that if someone feels left out, unsafe, or uncomfortable, they can call a time-out without the other two pouting about it.

Q: Newly nonmonogamous and dating after 16 years of monogamy. How to lighten the “let down” feeling when a date I’ve been looking forward to is over and I have to go back to my “regular” life?

A: Your marriage, aka your “regular” life, will fall apart if fun (going out, doing things, having adventures) is reserved for dates and stress (paying bills, doing chores, raising kids) is reserved for your spouse. New-relationship-energy-infused dates are effortless fun (usually), whereas keeping things fun with a spouse requires thought, effort, and MDMA.

Q: You always say that a new dad has to be willing to go with little or no sex for a long time and can’t bring up nonmonogamy. Does the same go for the mom if she’s the one who wants it more?

A: Women who’ve just given birth are usually less interested in (or capable of) sex for all the obvious reasons (physical trauma, physical exhaustion, emotional exhaustion), but studies have shown that men’s testosterone levels dip after becoming fathers, which can tank their libidos. Regardless of who wants it more, the best time for two people to discuss nonmonogamy is BEFORE they’ve scrambled their DNA together, not after. If you didn’t have that conversation before becoming parents, you should wait a year—at least—before bringing it up.

Q: In college my boyfriend found out his girlfriend was cheating on him with a friend. He told his friend he didn’t care, since he was planning to break up with his girlfriend at the end of the semester, and they both kept fucking her. She didn’t know they both knew. What she did was wrong (cheating), but I think my boyfriend and his friend did something worse, as she didn’t know she was being “shared” like this. How do I get my boyfriend to understand?

A: Sharing your boyfriend . . .

There is more to this week’s Savage Love. To read the entire column, go to Savage.Love

Read More

A threesome is probably safer than a shower Read More »

A vision for revision at Lit & Luz

The Lit & Luz Festival of Language, Literature, and Art (Lit & Luz) brings together writers, visual artists, and musicians from Mexico and the United States in an effort to foster cultural exchange. The artistic results of these cross-cultural experiences, from poetry to photography and everything in between, are then presented through a series of bilingual performances. The festival is presented first in the U.S. and is reset for presentation in Mexico the following winter, featuring the same group of collaborating guests.

In Chicago, the festival’s ninth edition begins at noon on October 31 with a virtual keynote by California-based poet Anthony Cody. The festivities continue that evening with an artist talk at Logan Center for the Arts featuring guest Balam Bartolomé with Esteban King, while over at The Insect Asylum is the Halloween edition of Favorite Poems featuring Kathleen Rooney, Robin Myers, Yolanda Segura, Kailah Peters, and Olivia Maciel, among other readers. The festival runs through November 5 with a final celebration at Chicago Art Department. Among the events are readings, workshops, and artist talks (some offer a virtual option) at venues across the city. The festival’s signature celebration, the Live Magazine Show, which features the final performances created by collaborative duos, formed by one artist from the U.S. and the other from Mexico, takes place at Logan Center for the Arts on Thursday, November 3. 

Lit & Luz Festival 10/31-11/5, various locations, most events free and all-ages. For full schedule, details, and locations, go to litluz.org.

Lit & Luz 2022 includes Mexican authors Dolores Dorantes, Mariana Oliver, and segura, as well as visual artists Bartolomé, Aura Arreola, and Héctor Jiménez Castillo. Chicago-based collaborators include authors Marty McConnell, Gabriel Ojeda-Sagué, and Antonio Díaz Oliva (ADO), along with visual artists Victoria Martinez, Amber Ginsburg, Laleh Motlagh, and musician Andy Slater

The Lit & Luz Festival is produced by MAKE Literary Productions, a nonprofit established in 2009 after the success of its founding literary magazine, MAKE, which was first published in 2004. The Chicago-based publication “seeks to expand the discussion of what it means to make something new from a reality that may look all too familiar, even tired, on the surface.” 

MAKE issue number 13, titled “Intercambio/Exchange,” was the magazine’s first as a bilingual edition and featured work by Latin American writers. The bilingual events that were organized that year (2012) to go along with the magazine’s release brought to light the need for translated literature. The issue emphasizes the importance of creating a bilingual exchange of literature considering the power of the Spanish language and culture in the U.S. 

With help from the MacArthur Foundation, in 2014 the Lit & Luz Festival of Language, Literature, and Art was officially formed. Since then, Lit & Luz founder and managing director Sarah Dodson says that “nearly 50 writers, artists, and musicians have traveled to Chicago for Lit & Luz Festival events, which are created in partnership with local arts organizations and universities.” 

“Revision” is the theme for this year’s iteration. Miguel Jiménez, founder and director of the Lit & Luz Book Club, explains this concept as “an opportunity to think about not just how the pandemic impacted our artistic practices and lives in the ‘early days,’ but how it ‘revised’ how we approach art, community, and inclusion. With so much happening in early 2020 and moving forward, we collectively took a deeper look at issues such as access and inclusion.”

Jiménez, who was born and raised in Back of the Yards, has always had a passion for Latine literature, music, and art and for sharing the work of artists he feels need to be seen, read, or heard. After university, where he studied creative writing and literature (DePauw University and CSU Fresno), he returned to Chicago and began working with the Chicago Artists Coalition, where he eventually became an editor for the organization’s newsletter, Chicago Artist News

At some point, Jiménez’s passion for literature led him to the newly formed author-focused festival, Lit & Luz. He says, “I was at these festivals before I was part of the [Lit & Luz] team. At the festival, there were writers I never thought I would see. For example, before Valeria Luiselli was the writer-superstar that she is now, I knew of her work. But I never imagined I’d see her one day because her work wasn’t translated. She was only writing in Spanish. I remember when I saw her I was thinking, ‘No way! Who brought her? Why is she here?’ And not just her, but her partner Álvaro Enrigue, too. I was a big fan of his, and this was before either of their books was translated. I was in awe.”

He began telling his friends about the festival and soon realized many were unaware of the events, so Jiménez did what anyone with a passion for literature must do. He approached Dodson with the idea of forming a book club. Jiménez proposed that reading the work of a writer, who would later be featured in the festival, might entice more people to attend since they would already be familiar with their work. 

The Lit & Luz Book Club was formed in 2018 and partnered with local bookstores to carry books by authors featured at the festival. The book club is currently in partnership with City Lit Books in Logan Square, Pilsen Community Books in Pilsen, and Exile in Bookville at the Fine Arts Building downtown. 

In 2020, Lit & Luz had to pivot to a virtual model due to COVID-19 restrictions, and things went better than expected. 

“It was really a wonderful experience because we were able to reach out to new audiences in other parts of the world, and maybe audiences that wouldn’t have been able to attend. The same goes for the audiences that have never heard of the festival or have heard of it but have been unable to attend. It brought a lot of people together virtually. Part of the festival also includes the book club, which is only hosted in Chicago, and because it was virtual we had more participants. People joined in from Mexico, and parts of Mexico where we never get to host the festival, like Chiapas and Oaxaca,” says Jiménez.

Although Lit & Luz continues to be a literary-focused event, it is also much more than that. 

Jiménez explains, “It progressively has become more. It’s still based on literature but it is also finding the intersections between literature, music, and visual art, and other forms of artistic expression. Increasingly, we have more visual artists, more sound artists, and artists in other mediums like dance. There are also multidisciplinary artists that actually work with it all. It’s like this infinite intersection of all these different mediums.”

This year’s Lit & Luz workshops feature . . .

Julio Enríquez-Ornelas, the author of Los hijos de la chingada, and editor of Critical Storytelling from the Borderlandsyolanda segura, a poet from Queretaro who wrote serie de circunstancias posibles en torno a una mujer mexicana de clase trabajadora, per/so/na, and estancias que por ahora tienen luz y se abren hacia el paisajeMariana Oliver, an essayist from Mexico City who won an award for their book, Aves MigratoriasRobin Myers, a poet whose collection of work includes Lo Demás / Else, Amalgama / Conflations, and Tener / HavingDolores Dorantes, the author of Copy/Copia and executive director of Mujer Migrante

As book bannings across the U.S. scorch away the work of voices often left unheard, programming that foments artistic exchange, like the Lit & Luz Festival, are indispensable. They strengthen literary endeavors and encourage sharing cross-cultural experiences, creating seemingly never-ending reciprocity. 

Read More

A vision for revision at Lit & Luz Read More »

A vision for revision at Lit & LuzSandra Treviñoon October 26, 2022 at 9:05 pm

The Lit & Luz Festival of Language, Literature, and Art (Lit & Luz) brings together writers, visual artists, and musicians from Mexico and the United States in an effort to foster cultural exchange. The artistic results of these cross-cultural experiences, from poetry to photography and everything in between, are then presented through a series of bilingual performances. The festival is presented first in the U.S. and is reset for presentation in Mexico the following winter, featuring the same group of collaborating guests.

In Chicago, the festival’s ninth edition begins at noon on October 31 with a virtual keynote by California-based poet Anthony Cody. The festivities continue that evening with an artist talk at Logan Center for the Arts featuring guest Balam Bartolomé with Esteban King, while over at The Insect Asylum is the Halloween edition of Favorite Poems featuring Kathleen Rooney, Robin Myers, Yolanda Segura, Kailah Peters, and Olivia Maciel, among other readers. The festival runs through November 5 with a final celebration at Chicago Art Department. Among the events are readings, workshops, and artist talks (some offer a virtual option) at venues across the city. The festival’s signature celebration, the Live Magazine Show, which features the final performances created by collaborative duos, formed by one artist from the U.S. and the other from Mexico, takes place at Logan Center for the Arts on Thursday, November 3. 

Lit & Luz Festival 10/31-11/5, various locations, most events free and all-ages. For full schedule, details, and locations, go to litluz.org.

Lit & Luz 2022 includes Mexican authors Dolores Dorantes, Mariana Oliver, and segura, as well as visual artists Bartolomé, Aura Arreola, and Héctor Jiménez Castillo. Chicago-based collaborators include authors Marty McConnell, Gabriel Ojeda-Sagué, and Antonio Díaz Oliva (ADO), along with visual artists Victoria Martinez, Amber Ginsburg, Laleh Motlagh, and musician Andy Slater

The Lit & Luz Festival is produced by MAKE Literary Productions, a nonprofit established in 2009 after the success of its founding literary magazine, MAKE, which was first published in 2004. The Chicago-based publication “seeks to expand the discussion of what it means to make something new from a reality that may look all too familiar, even tired, on the surface.” 

MAKE issue number 13, titled “Intercambio/Exchange,” was the magazine’s first as a bilingual edition and featured work by Latin American writers. The bilingual events that were organized that year (2012) to go along with the magazine’s release brought to light the need for translated literature. The issue emphasizes the importance of creating a bilingual exchange of literature considering the power of the Spanish language and culture in the U.S. 

With help from the MacArthur Foundation, in 2014 the Lit & Luz Festival of Language, Literature, and Art was officially formed. Since then, Lit & Luz founder and managing director Sarah Dodson says that “nearly 50 writers, artists, and musicians have traveled to Chicago for Lit & Luz Festival events, which are created in partnership with local arts organizations and universities.” 

“Revision” is the theme for this year’s iteration. Miguel Jiménez, founder and director of the Lit & Luz Book Club, explains this concept as “an opportunity to think about not just how the pandemic impacted our artistic practices and lives in the ‘early days,’ but how it ‘revised’ how we approach art, community, and inclusion. With so much happening in early 2020 and moving forward, we collectively took a deeper look at issues such as access and inclusion.”

Jiménez, who was born and raised in Back of the Yards, has always had a passion for Latine literature, music, and art and for sharing the work of artists he feels need to be seen, read, or heard. After university, where he studied creative writing and literature (DePauw University and CSU Fresno), he returned to Chicago and began working with the Chicago Artists Coalition, where he eventually became an editor for the organization’s newsletter, Chicago Artist News

At some point, Jiménez’s passion for literature led him to the newly formed author-focused festival, Lit & Luz. He says, “I was at these festivals before I was part of the [Lit & Luz] team. At the festival, there were writers I never thought I would see. For example, before Valeria Luiselli was the writer-superstar that she is now, I knew of her work. But I never imagined I’d see her one day because her work wasn’t translated. She was only writing in Spanish. I remember when I saw her I was thinking, ‘No way! Who brought her? Why is she here?’ And not just her, but her partner Álvaro Enrigue, too. I was a big fan of his, and this was before either of their books was translated. I was in awe.”

He began telling his friends about the festival and soon realized many were unaware of the events, so Jiménez did what anyone with a passion for literature must do. He approached Dodson with the idea of forming a book club. Jiménez proposed that reading the work of a writer, who would later be featured in the festival, might entice more people to attend since they would already be familiar with their work. 

The Lit & Luz Book Club was formed in 2018 and partnered with local bookstores to carry books by authors featured at the festival. The book club is currently in partnership with City Lit Books in Logan Square, Pilsen Community Books in Pilsen, and Exile in Bookville at the Fine Arts Building downtown. 

In 2020, Lit & Luz had to pivot to a virtual model due to COVID-19 restrictions, and things went better than expected. 

“It was really a wonderful experience because we were able to reach out to new audiences in other parts of the world, and maybe audiences that wouldn’t have been able to attend. The same goes for the audiences that have never heard of the festival or have heard of it but have been unable to attend. It brought a lot of people together virtually. Part of the festival also includes the book club, which is only hosted in Chicago, and because it was virtual we had more participants. People joined in from Mexico, and parts of Mexico where we never get to host the festival, like Chiapas and Oaxaca,” says Jiménez.

Although Lit & Luz continues to be a literary-focused event, it is also much more than that. 

Jiménez explains, “It progressively has become more. It’s still based on literature but it is also finding the intersections between literature, music, and visual art, and other forms of artistic expression. Increasingly, we have more visual artists, more sound artists, and artists in other mediums like dance. There are also multidisciplinary artists that actually work with it all. It’s like this infinite intersection of all these different mediums.”

This year’s Lit & Luz workshops feature . . .

Julio Enríquez-Ornelas, the author of Los hijos de la chingada, and editor of Critical Storytelling from the Borderlandsyolanda segura, a poet from Queretaro who wrote serie de circunstancias posibles en torno a una mujer mexicana de clase trabajadora, per/so/na, and estancias que por ahora tienen luz y se abren hacia el paisajeMariana Oliver, an essayist from Mexico City who won an award for their book, Aves MigratoriasRobin Myers, a poet whose collection of work includes Lo Demás / Else, Amalgama / Conflations, and Tener / HavingDolores Dorantes, the author of Copy/Copia and executive director of Mujer Migrante

As book bannings across the U.S. scorch away the work of voices often left unheard, programming that foments artistic exchange, like the Lit & Luz Festival, are indispensable. They strengthen literary endeavors and encourage sharing cross-cultural experiences, creating seemingly never-ending reciprocity. 

Read More

A vision for revision at Lit & LuzSandra Treviñoon October 26, 2022 at 9:05 pm Read More »

The Chicago Bears make a big trade that shows they have a planJordan Campbellon October 26, 2022 at 9:42 pm

There is no question that the Chicago Bears changed the conversation around their team after their convincing victory over the New England Patriots on Monday but that victory shouldn’t change the overall direction of the team.

Confirmation that the Bears’ front office understands the direction that the team is headed in was provided on Wednesday with the report that veteran defensive end Robert Quinn has been traded to the Philadelphia Eagles for a 2023 fourth-round draft pick.

Ever since first-year Bears’ general manager Ryan Poles began the rebuild process for the team last offseason with the trade of Khalil Mack and opting against re-signing veteran defensive lineman Akiem Hicks, the writing was on the wall in regard to Quinn’s future with the team.

Quinn told reporters over the offseason that he did not want to be traded from the Bears.

“In all honesty, this defense, knowing the type of defense we’re running, I’m very familiar with it,” Quinn said. “Knock on wood, I plan to be successful for my personal self. I guess I know what I’m coming into, and that takes weight off my shoulders.”

“You’re not coming into the building not knowing what’s about to happen. So I’m walking in here knowing exactly what they want from me, exactly what they expect from me, and what I need to do. Again, that makes life a whole lot easier when you’re not walking in confused.”

The trade of Quinn was the right move for the Bears and the direction they are headed. Quinn, at the age of 32, was not going to be a focal member of the next Bears’ team that makes the playoffs.

Blockbuster: The #Bears are trading star pass-rusher Robert Quinn to the #Eagles, per me and @MikeGarafolo. A major move, with the NFL’s best team simply reloading. pic.twitter.com/wDZ6ecWeEz

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) October 26, 2022

The Chicago Bears make the smart move with the trade of veteran Robert Quinn.

In addition, the move arms Poles with more capital with an additional fourth-round selection being added to his resources for the 2023 draft.

During the third day of the 2022 NFL Draft, Poles made four different trades in an attempt to gain more attempts at finding a steal in the later rounds. With an extra fourth-round pick at his disposal, that will create more flexibility for the Bears’ general manager moving forward.

Poles will likely look to add more flexibility before the NFL Trade Deadline on November 1. One player that could be moved is linebacker Roquan Smith. Smith was speaking with reporters on Wednesday when news of the Quinn trade broke.

Roquan Smith learned of the Robert Quinn trade while speaking to the media. He was emotional about it and had to leave the podium. pic.twitter.com/hiKjyn0HxJ

— Brendan Sugrue (@BrendanSugrue) October 26, 2022

Smith’s reaction confirms that Quinn was viewed as a leader within the Bears’ locker room and is further affirmation that Poles is not afraid to make a move in the best interest of the team regardless of the player’s status within the locker room.

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The Chicago Bears make a big trade that shows they have a planJordan Campbellon October 26, 2022 at 9:42 pm Read More »

The City of Chicago Commits to Advertising Equity in Local Media

CHICAGO — Today, Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot signed an Executive Order designating that City of Chicago departments allocate at least 50 percent of their annual advertising spending to community media outlets. More than 153 languages are spoken in households citywide, in addition to other diversity factors. Together, Chicago’s local media outlets reach all 77 community areas in all of the languages the city’s communities speak.

This is an effort that the Chicago Independent Media Alliance (CIMA) has been advocating for since 2020.

“Chicago is one of the most diverse cities in the world, and it’s only right that City government honors that diversity by supporting community and ethnic media outlets,” said Chicago Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot. “Through this equity-based Executive Order, we will ensure that City communications and information on programs are accessible to all of our residents — no matter their circumstances. This effort will also serve as an economic boon for many of our local media outlets, and strengthen the City’s relationship with the communities they represent.”

With this Executive Order, the City demonstrates its commitment to equitable access to vital information about City services and resources. It also commits to supporting the small, local media outlets that reach, cover, and hire people from all of Chicago’s communities.

“We are so excited Mayor Lightfoot is taking this first big step toward creating a more equitable playing field for the city’s marketing and advertising spending. We urge all city, county and state agencies to follow this lead,” said CIMA founder and Chicago Reader Publisher Tracy Baim. “This decision will not only ensure that Chicago’s local media can grow and support more voices; it will ensure that Chicago can be a blueprint for other cities.”

“Chicago is a leader in hyperlocal journalism. This is a significant step for advancing equity of voice in Chicago and beyond,” said Jhmira Alexander, President & Executive Director of Public Narrative. “Agency marketing and advertising dollars will offer community media outlets the chance to increase their capacity for coverage and innovation in better serving the different communities in our diverse city.” 

Chicago’s local media outlets have been advocating for this effort since October 2020, when CIMA — a project of the Reader Institute for Community Journalism linking more than 60 community media entities representing more than 80 outlets — began the work of replicating a study of New York City governmental advertising conducted by the Center for Community Media at the City University of New York (CUNY) Newmark Graduate School of Journalism. 

The New York project resulted in an Executive Order signed by Mayor Bill de Blasio in mid-2019. In 2020, the first year of full implementation, there was a multi-million-dollar shift to community and ethnic media

“The Newmark J-school is thrilled to learn that Chicago is following in the steps of New York City and creating a more equitable landscape for community media,” said Graciela Mochkofsky, Dean of the CUNY Newmark Graduate School of Journalism. “The New York City Executive Order and now permanent law, supported by the work of our Center for Community Media, allocates government advertising dollars to the myriad of newsrooms serving communities of color and immigrants in New York. This has strengthened the sector, effectively allowing thousands of people to stay informed and civically engaged.”

For the Chicago project, CIMA hired Sam Stecklow — journalist and researcher currently at Invisible Institute — who conducted a FOIA investigation of advertising spending by city, county, and state agencies. Unlike New York City, Chicago and sister city agencies do not handle advertising in a central fashion. Thus, FOIA requests were made to all City departments and sister agencies, other local agencies that are run by appointees of the Mayor of Chicago, and City-affiliated nonprofits that are run by appointees of the Mayor of Chicago.

CIMA Co-Directors Yazmin Dominguez and Savannah Hugueley created the City of Chicago Marketing Report (PDF) summarizing the investigation results. Overall, it found that, from 2015 to 2020, while 47.4% of advertising from city agencies was in community media, that only translated to 18.8% of total dollars spent. For what the City reported, 38.8% was spent in community media, but that was just 13% when viewed on dollars spent. 

“This project has been a goal of the Chicago Independent Media Alliance since its inception. This win could not have been accomplished without Sam Stecklow’s one-year dedication to the project,” said Co-Director of CIMA Yazmin Dominguez. “For a full picture, I encourage interested parties to read our City of Chicago Marketing Report (PDF). This Executive Order has the opportunity to be a gamechanger for Chicago’s local outlets. A more consistent and solid flow of advertising dollars will equate to stable newsrooms resulting in secure resources to fund and uplift more on-the-ground and investigative reporting.”

As part of the Executive Order, the Office of the Mayor will maintain a list of local media that exemplify Chicago’s interconnected communities. Agencies will also be able to utilize the Chicago Independent Media Directory created by CIMA. Featuring outlet statistics and audience demographics, this free media directory includes a growing list of Chicago’s independent and local media outlets in one central website. 

The Chicago Independent Media Directory was created in collaboration with Public Narrative — a Chicago-based nonprofit that has been elevating community voices in journalism for more than 30 years. Since 1995, Public Narrative has produced the Chicago Media Guide, “Getting on the Air, Online & Into Print,” which today provides contact information for over 5,000 Chicago-area journalists and media outlets. Public Narrative’s partnership with CIMA has been essential in advocating for, and creating resources to bring more revenue and support to, independent community media in the city.

CIMA information and reports: indiemediachi.org/about/

CIMA’s Chicago Independent Media Directory: cimadirectory.org

Public Narrative’s Chicago Media Guide will relaunch in November 2022. Visit publicnarrative.org/the-guide/ to learn more.

About CIMA

The Chicago Independent Media Alliance (CIMA) is a coalition of 62 independent, local, and community-driven media entities covering communities throughout the Chicago area, representing more than 80 outlets. Through regular collaboration and the creation of new revenue streams, CIMA uplifts the ecosystem in order to amplify the voices of Chicagoans. Since its founding in 2019, CIMA has helped direct more than $700,000 in funding for its members, through an annual fundraiser, matching foundation funds, and collaboration grants. Founded in 2019, CIMA is a project of the Reader Institute for Community Journalism, publisher of the Chicago Reader. See indiemediachi.org/about/.

About Public Narrative 

Public Narrative is Chicago’s premiere cultivator of narrative change and supporter of community-oriented journalism since 1989. It facilitates training, programming and resource building focused on cultivating media literacy, uplifting community voices in media, and shifting narratives around public health, public safety, and public education. Public Narrative supports more than 200 community and ethnic news outlets and for-and not-for-profit organizations through its initiatives. And it builds meaningful relationships among stakeholders to shift existing community narratives and amplify more inclusive and complete storytelling across Chicago, greater Illinois and beyond. See publicnarrative.org.

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