What’s New

ClassifiedsChicago Readeron September 1, 2022 at 3:00 pm

JOBS

Caregiver Responsibilities:Assisting with personal care, Following a prescribed healthcare plan, Ensuring my Mother home is organized according to her needs. Providing mobility assistance may be required, for example helping my Mother with her motorized wheelchair, appointments, grocery. Meal and watch over. Work Schedule is 5 days a week and 5 hours per day. Salary is $26/hr. Contact by email Daniel ([email protected]) for more details.

Dual Language (Spanish) Teacher – Provide Dual Language instructional program compatible with abilities, needs, learning characteristics w Dual Language model; implement curriculum, instructional methods, utilize materials within the parameters of the Dual Language program; create child-centered environment characterized by application of sound mental health and educational psychology practices; employ creative methods of instruction and utilize a variety of bilingual/ESL materials; formative and summative assessment for Dual Language, utilize data to improve instruction; provide building principal and Director of English Language Learner Programs with schedule of classroom activities; maintain lesson plans w all bilingual areas to be taught; use designated methods of reporting student progress. Reqd: bachelor’s degree (any field of study, per IL law); IL teaching certificate w bilingual (Spanish) endorsement or Educator License w Stipulations (ELS); and perm US work auth. Contact M Elisa Treviño, HR, Waukegan Community Unit School District #60, 1201 N. Sheridan Rd., Waukegan, IL 60085. Must apply online: www.wps60.org.

Fortune Brands Home & Security, Inc. is seeking a Sr. Manager, Digital in Deerfield, IL with the following requirements: Bachelor’s degree in Engineering, Information Technology, Information Systems or related field or foreign equivalent degree. 7 years of related experience. Required skills: Lead design, build, and complete testing phase of software application development by performing gap analysis on current and future state business processes and align to best practices in work areas related to Integrations, Ecommerce, Enterprise Resource Planning, Automation, Infrastructure, Cloud Computing, IOT, EDI, BI and Analytics (7 yrs); Design and develop Oracle ERP application by using PL/SQL, SQL Plus, Forms, Reports, Workflow Builder, BI Publisher, and OA Framework, and SOA Gateway/Suite, along with configuration and setups for AOL module (7 yrs); Conduct research into new technologies, including tools, components, and frameworks by producing training and documentation in relation to Web development, Digital Tools, Integration tools, Ecommerce, Enterprise Resource Planning, Automation, Infrastructure, Cloud Computing, IOT, EDI, BI and Analytics (4 yrs); Support design, development and configuration in the following software application Account Receivables, General Ledger, Order Management, Inventory, Purchasing, Trading Community Architecture (TCA), Human Resources Management System (HRMS), Application Object Library (AOL), Electronic Data Interchange (EDI), E Commerce Gateway, Work In Progress(WIP) and Bill of Materials (5 yrs). Telecommuting allowed; can live anywhere in the US except CA, MT, OR. Company headquarters in Deerfield, IL. Eligibility for hire in any state except CA, MT, OR. Anyone interested in this position may apply at https://www.fbhs.com/careers and search for job: Sr. Manager, Digital.

Cheetah Express, Inc. seeks an Logistics Analyst. Mail resume to 835 Greenleaf Ave, Elk Grove Village, IL.

PROFESSIONALS & SERVICES

CLEANING SERVICES CHESTNUT ORGANIZING AND CLEANING SERVICES: especially for people who need an organizing service because of depression, elderly, physical or mental challenges or other causes for your home’s clutter, disorganization, dysfunction, etc. We can organize for the downsizing of your current possessions to more easily move into a smaller home. With your help, we can help to organize your move. We can organize and clean for the deceased in lieu of having the bereaved needing to do the preparation to sell or rent the deceased’s home. We are absolutely not judgmental; we’ve seen and done “worse” than your job assignment. With your help, can we please help you? Chestnut Cleaning Service: 312-332-5575. www.ChestnutCleaning.com

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTYNotice is hereby given that pursuant to Section 4 of the Self-Storage Facility Act, State of Illinois, that Chicago Northside Storage – Lakeview /Western Ave Storage LLC will conduct sale(s) at www.storagetreasures.com by competitive bidding starting on September 14th and ending on September 21st @ 12:00 pm on the premises where the property has been stored, which are located at Chicago Northside Storage 2946 N Western Ave. Chicago, IL 60618. 773-305-4000. In the matter of the personal property for the individual listed below, Chicago Northside Storage – Lakeview. Richard O’Hern N25, Giovanni Garcia L02, Matt Hampton N12, C05, M10, Patricia Woods F05, Danny Diaz K29, Dean Powell P49. Purchases must be made with cash only and paid at the time of sale’s redemption. All goods are sold as is and must be removed at the time of purchase. Sale is subjected to adjournment.

RESEARCH

Have you had an unwanted sexual experience since age 18?Did you tell someone in your life about it who is also willing to participate? Women ages 18+ who have someone else in their life they told about their experience also willing to participate will be paid to complete a confidential online research survey for the Women’s Dyadic Support Study. Contact Dr. Sarah Ullman of the University of Illinois at Chicago, Criminology, Law, & Justice Department at [email protected], 312-996-5508. Protocol #2021-0019.

ADULT SERVICES

Danielle’s Lip Service, Erotic Phone Chat. 24/7. Must be 21+. Credit/Debit Cards Accepted. All Fetishes and Fantasies Are Welcomed. Personal, Private and Discrete. 773-935-4995

Want to add a listing to our classifieds?

See classified advertising information at chicagoreader.com/ads.

Read More

ClassifiedsChicago Readeron September 1, 2022 at 3:00 pm Read More »

Disability takes center stage with Babes With Blades

A man who murders children, abuses his wife, and usurps the throne, Shakespeare’s Richard III is the epitome of villainy—and usually shown as a limping hunchback othered because of his disability.

Babes With Blades, in collaboration with University of Illinois Chicago’s Disability Cultural Center, challenges that portrayal in a current production at the Edge Theater.

Richard’s disability has often been caricatured, and mostly interpreted by able-bodied actors. Babes With Blades centers his disability and puts it in the hands of those with lived disability experiences, including a director who is Deaf, an actor with partial blindness playing Richard III, and a Deaf actor playing Queen Elizabeth, among other women and nonbinary performers with disabilities seen and unseen.

Richard IIIThrough 10/15: Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Edge Theater, 5451 N. Broadway, babeswithblades.org; open captioning all performances 9/3-10/15, sensory friendly Sun 9/11-9/17, ASL Sat 9/24, audio description and touch tour Sat 10/1, ASL/audio description/touch tour/talkback Sun 10/9, livestreaming Sat 9/10 and Fri-Sat 9/23-9/24; $20-$35

Hayley Rice, the artistic director of Babes With Blades, invited disability advocate and artist Richard Costes to direct Richard III. During casting, Costes surveyed those auditioning to ask whether they identified as disabled and wanted to request accommodations. 

Accommodations range from having a large-print script to needing to be late or take a day off because of mental health needs. Costes acknowledges that many actors are afraid to request these accommodations for fear they won’t be cast, believing that the theater company will be unwilling to pay for a longer rehearsal period. 

“We really did our best to let the actors lead the way in terms of what they needed,” Costes says. “Then we did our absolute best to make sure that we could accommodate them.”

Costes was especially firm about casting people with disabilities in the opposing roles of Richard III and Queen Elizabeth, the woman who orchestrates his downfall. 

Aszkara Gilchrist portrays Richard while Queen Elizabeth is played by Lauren Paige. Costes wanted those roles played by people with visible disabilities to explore why the characters choose different paths.

“Richard believes that, because of his disability, he has been shunned by women, by God, and by his own mother,” Gilchrist says. “This lack of love has left him feeling empty, and he feels that the only thing that will fill that emptiness is becoming king.”

Gilchrist says she used to hide her disability because she felt people would be unwilling to cast her. She wouldn’t bring her cane to auditions for fear directors and producers would see her blindness as a liability.

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

“Only recently have I felt empowered enough to own my disability, and I began bringing my cane to auditions,” Gilchrist says. “Once I embraced who I am, a world of opportunities opened to me.”

Costes acknowledges that Shakespeare used Richard’s disability in an ableist manner, as a mark of evil. 

“I cannot deny that the core of this play is Richard’s disability,” Costes says. “And there is no way to get around that Richard is a villain. I do not want to shy away from the ableism in the script in terms of the other characters using Richard’s disability as an insult.”

“Shakespeare endeavored to paint Richard as a monster,” Gilchrist says. “He used disability as a tool to dehumanize Richard, depicting him with an exaggerated hunchback and giving the other characters in the play intensely ableist dialogue—for example, many compare him to creatures, such as a hedgehog and a ‘bunch-backed toad.’”

Gilchrist’s interpretation is that Richard is a person who just happens to be partially blind the way that she is a person who happens to be partially blind.

“His disability has contributed to hardships in his life, and it has definitely made him self loathing,” Gilchrist says. “There’s even some jealousy towards the able-bodied people around him. However, these are just things that make him a complete, complex person. By bringing my own disability and life experiences to Richard, our production makes him feel like a real person, rather than a caricature.”

Gilchrist describes the collaboration with other disabled actors as incredible. She praises Costes for understanding her both as an actor and a person living with a disability.

“I resonated with his vision for Richard III from the beginning,” Gilchrist says. “We aren’t shying away from or excusing the atrocities he commits; in fact, we are highlighting them. It’s important for audiences to see a disabled, cisgender woman of color committing despicable acts onstage. It may be uncomfortable, but this is a chance for people to recognize their biases.”

Costes says they wanted to make sure that Richard’s disability was not the cause of his evil choices but rather one of many contributing factors. He adds that he and Gilchrist explored the internalized ableism and self-loathing that many people with disabilities experience.

“That’s natural in terms of having to exist in a world that is not built for you,” Costes says. “There is anger and frustrations that you go through on a daily basis that just builds and builds and builds and builds. That was our key to understanding Richard’s character.”

It also contributed to casting another character with disabilities who does not do all the monstrous things that Richard does. 

“We are able to say that Richard had a choice,” Costes says. “He did not have to commit all these atrocities. Elizabeth shows us a different way.”

“I think it’s so interesting that the two masterminds of the play are both disabled,” Gilchrist says. “The audience will see how Richard and Elizabeth are similar in terms of their struggle with disability, yet they react very differently to the world and the people around them.”

Like other Babes With Blades productions, this show celebrates combat, not shying away from choreographing complex stage fights. Maureen Yasko provides fight and intimacy direction (with Jillian Leff assisting), creating fight choreography that Gilchrist calls both safe and visually striking.

“The stage combat in this production is unbelievable,” Gilchrist says. “It’s both a testament to the hard work and talent of the cast and Maureen’s incredible choreography. She isn’t afraid to lean into the darkness of the violence. I think people may be a little shocked at how intense some of the violence is, but it is so necessary to the story.”

The combat, Gilchrist says, emphasizes Richard’s cruelty and how horrific his actions are. 

“The choreography is complex and exciting, and I know the audience will be wowed,” Gilchrist says. 

Babes With Blades has endeavored to make the show accessible to all audiences. Every performance will have open captioning, and there will be sensory friendly performances on September 11 and 17; an ASL-interpreted show on September 24; an audio description and touch tour on October 1; livestreaming on September 10, 23, and 25; and a combined ASL interpretation, audio description, touch tour, and talkback on October 9. 

The accommodations strive to ensure that no one in the audience feels othered the way that the eponymous villain of Shakespeare’s tragedy was.


Read More

Disability takes center stage with Babes With Blades Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

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.


Hocus-pocus

All the usual TIF lies come out on both sides in the debate for and against the Red Line extension.


State of anxiety

Darren Bailey’s anti-Semitic abortion rhetoric is part of a larger MAGA election strategy. Sad to say, so far it’s worked.


MAGA enablers

Andrew Yang and his third party lead the way for Trump.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky Show Read More »

Disability takes center stage with Babes With BladesBridgette M. Redmanon September 1, 2022 at 2:11 pm

A man who murders children, abuses his wife, and usurps the throne, Shakespeare’s Richard III is the epitome of villainy—and usually shown as a limping hunchback othered because of his disability.

Babes With Blades, in collaboration with University of Illinois Chicago’s Disability Cultural Center, challenges that portrayal in a current production at the Edge Theater.

Richard’s disability has often been caricatured, and mostly interpreted by able-bodied actors. Babes With Blades centers his disability and puts it in the hands of those with lived disability experiences, including a director who is Deaf, an actor with partial blindness playing Richard III, and a Deaf actor playing Queen Elizabeth, among other women and nonbinary performers with disabilities seen and unseen.

Richard IIIThrough 10/15: Thu-Sat 8 PM, Sun 3 PM, Edge Theater, 5451 N. Broadway, babeswithblades.org; open captioning all performances 9/3-10/15, sensory friendly Sun 9/11-9/17, ASL Sat 9/24, audio description and touch tour Sat 10/1, ASL/audio description/touch tour/talkback Sun 10/9, livestreaming Sat 9/10 and Fri-Sat 9/23-9/24; $20-$35

Hayley Rice, the artistic director of Babes With Blades, invited disability advocate and artist Richard Costes to direct Richard III. During casting, Costes surveyed those auditioning to ask whether they identified as disabled and wanted to request accommodations. 

Accommodations range from having a large-print script to needing to be late or take a day off because of mental health needs. Costes acknowledges that many actors are afraid to request these accommodations for fear they won’t be cast, believing that the theater company will be unwilling to pay for a longer rehearsal period. 

“We really did our best to let the actors lead the way in terms of what they needed,” Costes says. “Then we did our absolute best to make sure that we could accommodate them.”

Costes was especially firm about casting people with disabilities in the opposing roles of Richard III and Queen Elizabeth, the woman who orchestrates his downfall. 

Aszkara Gilchrist portrays Richard while Queen Elizabeth is played by Lauren Paige. Costes wanted those roles played by people with visible disabilities to explore why the characters choose different paths.

“Richard believes that, because of his disability, he has been shunned by women, by God, and by his own mother,” Gilchrist says. “This lack of love has left him feeling empty, and he feels that the only thing that will fill that emptiness is becoming king.”

Gilchrist says she used to hide her disability because she felt people would be unwilling to cast her. She wouldn’t bring her cane to auditions for fear directors and producers would see her blindness as a liability.

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

“Only recently have I felt empowered enough to own my disability, and I began bringing my cane to auditions,” Gilchrist says. “Once I embraced who I am, a world of opportunities opened to me.”

Costes acknowledges that Shakespeare used Richard’s disability in an ableist manner, as a mark of evil. 

“I cannot deny that the core of this play is Richard’s disability,” Costes says. “And there is no way to get around that Richard is a villain. I do not want to shy away from the ableism in the script in terms of the other characters using Richard’s disability as an insult.”

“Shakespeare endeavored to paint Richard as a monster,” Gilchrist says. “He used disability as a tool to dehumanize Richard, depicting him with an exaggerated hunchback and giving the other characters in the play intensely ableist dialogue—for example, many compare him to creatures, such as a hedgehog and a ‘bunch-backed toad.’”

Gilchrist’s interpretation is that Richard is a person who just happens to be partially blind the way that she is a person who happens to be partially blind.

“His disability has contributed to hardships in his life, and it has definitely made him self loathing,” Gilchrist says. “There’s even some jealousy towards the able-bodied people around him. However, these are just things that make him a complete, complex person. By bringing my own disability and life experiences to Richard, our production makes him feel like a real person, rather than a caricature.”

Gilchrist describes the collaboration with other disabled actors as incredible. She praises Costes for understanding her both as an actor and a person living with a disability.

“I resonated with his vision for Richard III from the beginning,” Gilchrist says. “We aren’t shying away from or excusing the atrocities he commits; in fact, we are highlighting them. It’s important for audiences to see a disabled, cisgender woman of color committing despicable acts onstage. It may be uncomfortable, but this is a chance for people to recognize their biases.”

Costes says they wanted to make sure that Richard’s disability was not the cause of his evil choices but rather one of many contributing factors. He adds that he and Gilchrist explored the internalized ableism and self-loathing that many people with disabilities experience.

“That’s natural in terms of having to exist in a world that is not built for you,” Costes says. “There is anger and frustrations that you go through on a daily basis that just builds and builds and builds and builds. That was our key to understanding Richard’s character.”

It also contributed to casting another character with disabilities who does not do all the monstrous things that Richard does. 

“We are able to say that Richard had a choice,” Costes says. “He did not have to commit all these atrocities. Elizabeth shows us a different way.”

“I think it’s so interesting that the two masterminds of the play are both disabled,” Gilchrist says. “The audience will see how Richard and Elizabeth are similar in terms of their struggle with disability, yet they react very differently to the world and the people around them.”

Like other Babes With Blades productions, this show celebrates combat, not shying away from choreographing complex stage fights. Maureen Yasko provides fight and intimacy direction (with Jillian Leff assisting), creating fight choreography that Gilchrist calls both safe and visually striking.

“The stage combat in this production is unbelievable,” Gilchrist says. “It’s both a testament to the hard work and talent of the cast and Maureen’s incredible choreography. She isn’t afraid to lean into the darkness of the violence. I think people may be a little shocked at how intense some of the violence is, but it is so necessary to the story.”

The combat, Gilchrist says, emphasizes Richard’s cruelty and how horrific his actions are. 

“The choreography is complex and exciting, and I know the audience will be wowed,” Gilchrist says. 

Babes With Blades has endeavored to make the show accessible to all audiences. Every performance will have open captioning, and there will be sensory friendly performances on September 11 and 17; an ASL-interpreted show on September 24; an audio description and touch tour on October 1; livestreaming on September 10, 23, and 25; and a combined ASL interpretation, audio description, touch tour, and talkback on October 9. 

The accommodations strive to ensure that no one in the audience feels othered the way that the eponymous villain of Shakespeare’s tragedy was.


Read More

Disability takes center stage with Babes With BladesBridgette M. Redmanon September 1, 2022 at 2:11 pm Read More »

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon September 1, 2022 at 7:05 am

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

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.


Hocus-pocus

All the usual TIF lies come out on both sides in the debate for and against the Red Line extension.


State of anxiety

Darren Bailey’s anti-Semitic abortion rhetoric is part of a larger MAGA election strategy. Sad to say, so far it’s worked.


MAGA enablers

Andrew Yang and his third party lead the way for Trump.

Read More

Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon September 1, 2022 at 7:05 am Read More »

Armon Watts addition sends message about Chicago Bears’ defensive identityRyan Heckmanon September 1, 2022 at 2:30 pm

After the NFL’s initial roster cuts on Tuesday, teams went deep into the waiver wire in order to find additional talent. The Chicago Bears ended up claiming the most players by any team, with six new additions on Wednesday.

One of those additions was a 2021 breakout player in defensive lineman Armon Watts, who was cut by the Minnesota Vikings. The Vikings opted to trade for Ross Blacklock instead, making him a starter in place of Watts.

In order to make room for Watts, the Bears parted ways with former seventh-round pick Khyiris Tonga, who was a fan favorite and looked like he could become an integral part of this defense in the future.

But, Tonga and Watts are very different players. Bringing in Watts was a smart move, as he fits this defense much better than Tonga did.

Armon Watts will fit the Chicago Bears defense well, and sends a message about what this team wants to accomplish.

While Tonga was a strong run-stuffer on the interior, that’s not the direction the Bears wanted to go with their front. Matt Eberflus and Alan Williams’ 4-3 scheme wants to get after the quarterback with their front four, and Watts is a much better interior pass rusher than Tonga.

In fact, Watts finished with a top-25 interior pass rush grade last year via Pro Football Focus. Still, the Vikings parted ways with the 26-year-old and the Bears were able to take advantage.

Last year, Watts broke out with 5.0 sacks in nine starts. He also came up with 10 quarterback hits, three tackles for loss and two forced fumbles while playing 56 percent of defensive snaps in Minnesota.

Looking at the Bears’ defensive line, they have a lot of guys who are better pass rushers than anything else. Justin Jones, Al-Quadin Muhammad, Robert Quinn, Angelo Blackson, Trevis Gipson, Dominique Robinson — all of these are guys who can get after the quarterback on any given down.

Watts simply adds another talented lineman to this group.

Much has been made about the Bears’ offensive woes and their lack of talent surrounding Justin Fields. However, the defense could be much better than some may think — and it all starts up front.

With two rookie defensive backs in their starting secondary, the Bears will need a formidable front four to help those guys out. It is very clear that this is the goal by Poles and Eberflus, to have a deep defensive line that can get after the quarterback and force ill-timed mistakes which the secondary can take advantage of.

Somehow, Watts was a victim of cutdown day. And somehow, the Bears were able to add him. Now, he’ll only add to the strength that is this defensive line.

Read More

Armon Watts addition sends message about Chicago Bears’ defensive identityRyan Heckmanon September 1, 2022 at 2:30 pm Read More »

Alex Leatherwood was well-worth the Chicago Bears picking upRyan Heckmanon September 1, 2022 at 1:25 pm

Wednesday, the Chicago Bears continued putting the final touches on their 53-man roster. On Tuesday, the NFL saw each team reach their initial limit while making dozens of cuts.

The Bears ended up putting in claims on several players, claiming a total of six altogether — an NFL-high.

One of those players claimed was 2021 first-round pick Alex Leatherwood, formerly of the Las Vegas Raiders and coming to the NFL by way of the Alabama Crimson Tide.

Leatherwood was labeled a bust by many after just one season, but not everybody knew the entire story. The Raiders were, of course, a mess in 2021. Leatherwood was placed in a position where it would be difficult for him to succeed, and if the Bears are smart, they’ll go the correct route.

By claiming Alex Leatherwood, the Chicago Bears are taking a worthy risk with plenty of upside.

In 2018 is where you could start to see the potential for Leatherwood to be an NFL caliber offensive lineman, when he lined up at right guard for 15 games at Bama. After that year, Leatherwood was voted Second Team All SEC before moving to left tackle going forward.

Even after moving to tackle, Leatherwood’s notoriety grew further as he earned First Team All SEC at that position. Still, draft experts believed his traits best suited him for the guard position. Although he earned high honors at left tackle his junior year, the tape showed room for improvement in pass blocking.

Looking at his collegiate tape, Leatherwood’s biggest issues came on the outside at tackle where he didn’t have strong enough hands to handle the elite edge rushers. He also struggled to get out quickly in space, laterally. His traits certainly suited him best on the interior, and ideally in a zone run scheme — which is what the Bears run.

In addition, Leatherwood was actually not bad when it came to inside pass rushers. He operated much better “in a phone booth,” which sounds a lot like what we’ve been seeing with Teven Jenkins as of late.

Everything said about Leatherwood in his pre-draft analysis screams guard, yet Tom Cable opted to play him at tackle in Las Vegas. It should be noted that Cable has had mixed results in the NFL as an offensive line coach, not always being able to find success. Moving Leatherwood to tackle, in the NFL, seemed like a blatant mistake at the time — and here we are, now. It was absolutely a mistake.

Cable has since been fired, and has not yet found another job.

Enter Ryan Poles, an ex-offensive linemen and now in charge in Chicago. Poles has been extremely decisive with his roster choices thus far, making this “his” team. He’s also allowed Matt Eberflus to play his guys at different spots, simply trying to find the best players at each one.

Leatherwood is still a project, at this point, but with his traits coming out of Alabama, he’s a worthy addition to this Bears team. He’ll likely be a guard on this roster, and he’ll be able to provide good depth in his first season with the team. Beyond 2022, Leatherwood could have an opportunity to start if he’s able to develop.

On the flip side, should Leatherwood not end up panning out, then the Bears aren’t out a whole lot. Taking a flier on the remaining $5.9 million of his contract looks very small by comparison. If he doesn’t stick around long-term, the Bears aren’t out major cash.

Read More

Alex Leatherwood was well-worth the Chicago Bears picking upRyan Heckmanon September 1, 2022 at 1:25 pm Read More »

Highly sought-after NBA Academy talents star at BWB Africa camp in Cairoon September 1, 2022 at 12:44 pm

Thierry Darlan relished advice from Orlando Magic center Mo Bamba. Armand Lenoir/NBAE via Getty Images

Thierry Serge Darlan (Central African Republic) and Jana El Alfy (Egypt) were the male and female MVPs respectively at the 2022 Basketball Without Borders (BWB) camp in Cairo, organised by the NBA and FIBA.

The pair from the NBA Academy are both on the radars of NCAA Division I colleges, but neither has committed to a university as of yet. Darlan recently visited Santa Clara University in California, while El Alfy has a wealth of options.

She has met with the University of Louisville, while UConn, Duke University, UCLA, the University of North Carolina and the University of Michigan are also among her potential options. She told ESPN that she would fly to the US to hold further meetings after BWB.

In total, there were 64 campers present at BWB Africa this week – all aged 18 or under and representing a total of 25 African countries. Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr was the headline staff attendee and selected El Alfy with his first pick at the BWB draft for what ended up being the winning girls’ team.

Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr worked with Jana El Alfy and she was his first pick at the BWB draft. Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images

“I didn’t believe him at first, but it’s just an amazing feeling and I’m really happy to be here,” El Alfy told ESPN regarding the experience of being Kerr’s first pick.

“Being coached by Coach Steve Kerr is just incredible. I can’t express how I feel right now. It’s like a dream come true. I’m really proud to be part of the BWB camp and participate in that camp and get to play with other players from around Africa and compete with their physicality and everything like that. I’m actually honoured to be here.”

Steve Kerr on his Cairo homecoming and his love for Mohamed Salah

Her father, Ehab El Alfy, is the coach of the Egyptian women’s national team and a former player at Al Ahly. Naturally, after his daughter picked up the game from him, that was the club at which she furthered her basketball education, joining around the age of five.

Still on Ahly’s books today at 16, she has the privilege of being surrounded by players with experience of the US college system.

“I’ve taken advice from Meral [Abdelgawad], Raneem [Elgedawy] and Nadine Selaawi. I’ve actually taken [some] from everyone who has travelled to the US. They’re actually helping me a lot and giving me advice about what to focus on and look for [but] it’s all my decision,” she said.

Darlan, 18, has already represented the Central African Republic’s national team and played at the BAL for Petro de Luanda, where he won the respect of captain Carlos Morais, once of the Toronto Raptors.

“For us, we’ve got lucky because we have a nice guy, a nice kid. He knows how to take care of himself. He doesn’t talk much but he lifted the whole team. For us, it’s been amazing having a young player of such talent,” Morais told ESPN in April.

Darlan gave special thanks to Orlando Magic center Mo Bamba for his advice during the BWB camp, telling ESPN: “Mo Bamba told me that he played like me — he used to play freely.”

Other current NBA players who were present for the camp in Cairo from 28-31 August were Malcolm Brogdon and Grant Williams (both Boston Celtics) and Udoka Azubuike (Utah Jazz).

Kerr was joined by fellow NBA head coaches Chris Finch (Minnesota Timberwolves), Willie Green (New Orleans Pelicans), Chauncey Billups (Portland Trail Blazers) and Wes Unseld Jr (Washington Wizards).

The camp directors included Toronto Raptors president Masai Ujiri, LA Clippers scout Lance Blanks, Cleveland Cavaliers General Manager Mike Gansey and World Association of Basketball Coaches president Patrick Hunt.

The camp MVPs were voted for by visiting NBA players, coaches and directors at the end of a busy week of basketball action at the Dr. Hassan Moustafa Sports Hall.

Read More

Highly sought-after NBA Academy talents star at BWB Africa camp in Cairoon September 1, 2022 at 12:44 pm Read More »

Jeff Parker and the rhythm section from Tarbaby cut loose on Eastside Romp

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Why did it take six years for this album to be released? It didn’t take long to make: electric guitarist Jeff Parker, double bassist Eric Revis, and drummer Nasheet Waits spent just one day recording Eastside Romp in a Pasadena studio in late May 2016, and it’s been mixed since 2018. The music certainly hasn’t languished because of an issue with its quality—the session was basically a summit between the formerly Chicago-based string bender and the rhythm section from celebrated jazz ensemble Tarbaby, and all three players shine. The album wastes no time shifting into high gear. After stating the jubilant theme of Marion Brown’s “Similar Limits,” the musicians launch into a propulsive three-way slalom, then converge with a clash like an explosion in a Slinky factory—only to seamlessly snap into a restatement of the theme. For the rest of Eastside Romp, the trio play a variety of instrumentals composed by each member. Parker’s “Wait” is an importuning ballad whose melody practically demands to be delivered with one knee on the ground and one hand over the heart—except that it’d be tough for the guitarist to hold that pose, given that it sounds like he needs four limbs to play the shimmering, effects-laden solo that clinches his plea for pause. Revis’s ironically titled “Drunkard’s Lullaby” draws a zigzagging path that even a stone-cold-sober gymnast might have a hard time walking without stumbling; the trio negotiate it handily, with a thrilling combination of rhythmic precision and electronic distortion. And Waits’s “A Room for VG” uses sparse notes and reluctantly deployed drumbeats to mold silence into exquisite shapes. Maybe one day we’ll find out why this music spent so long under wraps, but even without that answer it’s profoundly satisfying to hear Parker, Revis, and Waits reconcile accessibility and abstraction.

Jeff Parker, Eric Revis, and Nasheet Waits’s Eastside Romp is available through Rogueart’s website.

Read More

Jeff Parker and the rhythm section from Tarbaby cut loose on Eastside Romp Read More »

Jeff Parker and the rhythm section from Tarbaby cut loose on Eastside RompBill Meyeron September 1, 2022 at 11:00 am

Did you know? The Reader is nonprofit. The Reader is member supported. You can help keep the Reader free for everyone—and get exclusive rewards—when you become a member. The Reader Revolution membership program is a sustainable way for you to support local, independent media.

Why did it take six years for this album to be released? It didn’t take long to make: electric guitarist Jeff Parker, double bassist Eric Revis, and drummer Nasheet Waits spent just one day recording Eastside Romp in a Pasadena studio in late May 2016, and it’s been mixed since 2018. The music certainly hasn’t languished because of an issue with its quality—the session was basically a summit between the formerly Chicago-based string bender and the rhythm section from celebrated jazz ensemble Tarbaby, and all three players shine. The album wastes no time shifting into high gear. After stating the jubilant theme of Marion Brown’s “Similar Limits,” the musicians launch into a propulsive three-way slalom, then converge with a clash like an explosion in a Slinky factory—only to seamlessly snap into a restatement of the theme. For the rest of Eastside Romp, the trio play a variety of instrumentals composed by each member. Parker’s “Wait” is an importuning ballad whose melody practically demands to be delivered with one knee on the ground and one hand over the heart—except that it’d be tough for the guitarist to hold that pose, given that it sounds like he needs four limbs to play the shimmering, effects-laden solo that clinches his plea for pause. Revis’s ironically titled “Drunkard’s Lullaby” draws a zigzagging path that even a stone-cold-sober gymnast might have a hard time walking without stumbling; the trio negotiate it handily, with a thrilling combination of rhythmic precision and electronic distortion. And Waits’s “A Room for VG” uses sparse notes and reluctantly deployed drumbeats to mold silence into exquisite shapes. Maybe one day we’ll find out why this music spent so long under wraps, but even without that answer it’s profoundly satisfying to hear Parker, Revis, and Waits reconcile accessibility and abstraction.

Jeff Parker, Eric Revis, and Nasheet Waits’s Eastside Romp is available through Rogueart’s website.

Read More

Jeff Parker and the rhythm section from Tarbaby cut loose on Eastside RompBill Meyeron September 1, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »