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‘Black dance is American dance’Irene Hsiaoon August 25, 2022 at 2:47 pm

On August 27 in Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park, the eight companies representing the Chicago Black Dance Legacy Project—Ayodele Drum and Dance, Chicago Multi-Cultural Dance Center, Deeply Rooted Dance Theater, Forward Momentum Chicago, Joel Hall Dancers and Center, Muntu Dance Theatre of Chicago, Najwa Dance Corps, and Red Clay Dance Company (joined also by M.A.D.D. Rhythms)—share the city’s largest outdoor stage for the first time in Reclamation: The Spirit of Black Dance in Chicago, coproduced by DCASE as part of the Year of Chicago Dance.

“The companies themselves started the work of legacy,” says Tracie D. Hall, who began the CBDLP in 2019. “It felt like a question was being asked: Who is going to work to raise the visibility of the virtuosity of Black dance in Chicago? Who is called to that kind of stewardship? These companies were already delivering the highest levels of artistic and cultural production. They needed support; they needed others to come together and shout their names, not just to the dance world and the art world, but to Chicago itself.”

Reclamation: The Spirit of Black Dance in ChicagoSat 8/27, 6:30 PM, Millennium Park, 201 E. Randolph, RSVP requested at eventbrite.com, info at chicagoblackdancelegacy.org, free

Galvanized by the findings in Mapping the Dance Landscape in Chicagoland, a 2019 census and analysis of the individuals and organizations that participate, produce, and fund dance in the city, Hall, then director of the Joyce Foundation’s culture program, partnered with the Logan Center for the Arts to create an organization with the mission of advocacy, archiving, capacity building, and presenting Black dance in Chicago. 

“We have a history in Chicago of supporting arts and artists, but I didn’t know if we were always supporting Black arts organizations and leaders in the same way, to the same extent, with the same amount of funding, with an equitable amount of fanfare,” she says. “If we aren’t doing that, how do we repair that? And if we don’t repair that, what do we lose? Dance has been one of those art forms to which Black artists in Chicago have made specific and unique contributions but hasn’t always been funded accordingly.”

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Beginning with a cohort of eight dance organizations, the CBDLP intends to expand in the coming years. “I have observed the kind of acceleration that can occur when you try to uplift the sector rather than an individual choreographer or company,” says Hall. “I really wanted to test what that collective impact could look like. And I knew the project would need a home for the companies to be seen, supported, and nurtured. I thought of Logan immediately, because Bill Michel [executive director] and Emily Lansana [senior director of community arts engagement] had already demonstrated their commitment to supporting Black artists.”

Princess Mhoon Credit Patrick Orr

Since March 2021, the CBDLP has been under the leadership of choreographer and scholar Princess Mhoon, an alumna of five of the eight organizations in the CBDLP. “Chicago is my hometown,” she says. “My parents were founding members of Najwa Dance Corps and Muntu Dance Theatre. I came up through the ranks, and I always wanted to find a way to give back to the dance community.” 

During her research in Black dance and American performance at Howard University, where she obtained a master’s degree in history, Mhoon says, “I never saw any of the people who taught me. Muntu has been around 50 years; Joel Hall for 48. I learned from all of them, and they were not in the history books. So I did my thesis on Black dance in Chicago. This is American history—how can we ignore it? There’s artwork in museums all across America, books live forever, but dance is visceral, fleeting, in the moment. It’s so easy to forget it. So the Chicago Black Dance Legacy Project is here for all of it: we’re here to help companies grow, to help companies from an infrastructure standpoint, to help artistic growth, and to archive and preserve.”

As the CBDLP grows, Mhoon’s perspective on the past and hopes for the future are expansive. “How can we be inclusive but remain focused on our core values?” she muses. “Black dance is American dance. During the transatlantic slave trade, we’re on plantations, we’re not allowed to dance, we’re not allowed to play music, and we come up with dances like the cakewalk and the juba jig. We’re using the polyrhythms from the drums, we’re communicating with each other, we’re making fun of them, and they think we’re entertaining them. And that’s because of their influence on us and our influence on them. That’s how musical theater started: us taking our social dances to the stage. Tap: Irish and African Americans being in New York together. Some people say, ‘Is there such a thing as Black dance?’ I think so. It’s the cross-pollination of cultures that creates Black dance.”

About Reclamation, Mhoon says, “The companies had had a conversation about wanting to have a concert together in Millennium Park—it’s the realization of their dreams. It feels historic. They’ve shared a stage before but not an audience of this size with this level of support. It has broken the silos between the companies and the different genres of dance; it really fostered the idea of collaboration.”

“I’ve heard them say they don’t think of themselves as islands,” adds Hall. “They understand they share students, audiences, supporters. I think they’ve had a lot of mutual admiration but haven’t always known each other’s organizational goals or what legacy looked like to each of these founders. Now they’re able to watch each other, participate in concerts together, and learn what each company contributes. Artists learn and develop in the company of other artists—that pushes the art form forward. That’s what we see happening before our eyes. We’re seeing Chicago dance advance.”

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‘Black dance is American dance’Irene Hsiaoon August 25, 2022 at 2:47 pm Read More »

‘Black dance is American dance’Irene Hsiaoon August 25, 2022 at 2:47 pm

On August 27 in Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park, the eight companies representing the Chicago Black Dance Legacy Project—Ayodele Drum and Dance, Chicago Multi-Cultural Dance Center, Deeply Rooted Dance Theater, Forward Momentum Chicago, Joel Hall Dancers and Center, Muntu Dance Theatre of Chicago, Najwa Dance Corps, and Red Clay Dance Company (joined also by M.A.D.D. Rhythms)—share the city’s largest outdoor stage for the first time in Reclamation: The Spirit of Black Dance in Chicago, coproduced by DCASE as part of the Year of Chicago Dance.

“The companies themselves started the work of legacy,” says Tracie D. Hall, who began the CBDLP in 2019. “It felt like a question was being asked: Who is going to work to raise the visibility of the virtuosity of Black dance in Chicago? Who is called to that kind of stewardship? These companies were already delivering the highest levels of artistic and cultural production. They needed support; they needed others to come together and shout their names, not just to the dance world and the art world, but to Chicago itself.”

Reclamation: The Spirit of Black Dance in ChicagoSat 8/27, 6:30 PM, Millennium Park, 201 E. Randolph, RSVP requested at eventbrite.com, info at chicagoblackdancelegacy.org, free

Galvanized by the findings in Mapping the Dance Landscape in Chicagoland, a 2019 census and analysis of the individuals and organizations that participate, produce, and fund dance in the city, Hall, then director of the Joyce Foundation’s culture program, partnered with the Logan Center for the Arts to create an organization with the mission of advocacy, archiving, capacity building, and presenting Black dance in Chicago. 

“We have a history in Chicago of supporting arts and artists, but I didn’t know if we were always supporting Black arts organizations and leaders in the same way, to the same extent, with the same amount of funding, with an equitable amount of fanfare,” she says. “If we aren’t doing that, how do we repair that? And if we don’t repair that, what do we lose? Dance has been one of those art forms to which Black artists in Chicago have made specific and unique contributions but hasn’t always been funded accordingly.”

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.

Beginning with a cohort of eight dance organizations, the CBDLP intends to expand in the coming years. “I have observed the kind of acceleration that can occur when you try to uplift the sector rather than an individual choreographer or company,” says Hall. “I really wanted to test what that collective impact could look like. And I knew the project would need a home for the companies to be seen, supported, and nurtured. I thought of Logan immediately, because Bill Michel [executive director] and Emily Lansana [senior director of community arts engagement] had already demonstrated their commitment to supporting Black artists.”

Princess Mhoon Credit Patrick Orr

Since March 2021, the CBDLP has been under the leadership of choreographer and scholar Princess Mhoon, an alumna of five of the eight organizations in the CBDLP. “Chicago is my hometown,” she says. “My parents were founding members of Najwa Dance Corps and Muntu Dance Theatre. I came up through the ranks, and I always wanted to find a way to give back to the dance community.” 

During her research in Black dance and American performance at Howard University, where she obtained a master’s degree in history, Mhoon says, “I never saw any of the people who taught me. Muntu has been around 50 years; Joel Hall for 48. I learned from all of them, and they were not in the history books. So I did my thesis on Black dance in Chicago. This is American history—how can we ignore it? There’s artwork in museums all across America, books live forever, but dance is visceral, fleeting, in the moment. It’s so easy to forget it. So the Chicago Black Dance Legacy Project is here for all of it: we’re here to help companies grow, to help companies from an infrastructure standpoint, to help artistic growth, and to archive and preserve.”

As the CBDLP grows, Mhoon’s perspective on the past and hopes for the future are expansive. “How can we be inclusive but remain focused on our core values?” she muses. “Black dance is American dance. During the transatlantic slave trade, we’re on plantations, we’re not allowed to dance, we’re not allowed to play music, and we come up with dances like the cakewalk and the juba jig. We’re using the polyrhythms from the drums, we’re communicating with each other, we’re making fun of them, and they think we’re entertaining them. And that’s because of their influence on us and our influence on them. That’s how musical theater started: us taking our social dances to the stage. Tap: Irish and African Americans being in New York together. Some people say, ‘Is there such a thing as Black dance?’ I think so. It’s the cross-pollination of cultures that creates Black dance.”

About Reclamation, Mhoon says, “The companies had had a conversation about wanting to have a concert together in Millennium Park—it’s the realization of their dreams. It feels historic. They’ve shared a stage before but not an audience of this size with this level of support. It has broken the silos between the companies and the different genres of dance; it really fostered the idea of collaboration.”

“I’ve heard them say they don’t think of themselves as islands,” adds Hall. “They understand they share students, audiences, supporters. I think they’ve had a lot of mutual admiration but haven’t always known each other’s organizational goals or what legacy looked like to each of these founders. Now they’re able to watch each other, participate in concerts together, and learn what each company contributes. Artists learn and develop in the company of other artists—that pushes the art form forward. That’s what we see happening before our eyes. We’re seeing Chicago dance advance.”

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‘Black dance is American dance’Irene Hsiaoon August 25, 2022 at 2:47 pm Read More »

2022 College Football Power 5 Betting Preview

National Championship Picks, Conference Championship Picks, Win Totals, Heisman Picks, and more for the 2022 College Football season

The time is finally upon us, the start of the 2022 college football season is here. Week 0 is less than a week away and you are probably realizing you haven’t placed any futures for the season yet. Not to worry, this preview will take you through all 5 power five conferences, picking a winner for each, and talking about some of the players and teams you need to keep an eye on.

All lines posted are accurate as of time of writing per BetMGM.

National Champions

The sportsbooks consider the National Championship a three team race with Alabama +190, Ohio State +320, and Georgia +350 the favorites to win it all. The odds significantly increase after that with Clemson sitting at +1200 and USC at +2000. If you don’t want to listen to me go on about why Alabama and Ohio State are the best teams in the country then go ahead and skip to the Conference Champions section. It’s true though, no matter how I look at this season I can’t envision seeing anyone other than Alabama or Ohio State lifting the trophy. Alabama returns last years Heisman winning quarterback in Bryce Young as well as five other starters on the offensive side of the ball. On defense, they return 2021 Nagurski Award (Best Defensive Player) winner Will Anderson. Anderson is a 2022 Heisman candidate and likely top 10 pick in the 2023 NFL Draft. Despite losing their top running back and top two receivers from last year, Alabama is poised once again to contend for its 19th national championship. Its chalky for sure, but I can’t deny the value anytime you can get Alabama at almost 2/1 to win the national championship. They’ll have a chip on their shoulder this year after losing to Georgia in January. Pick: Alabama to win the National Championship +190.

The second favorite to win it all in 2022 is of course the Ohio State Buckeyes. The Buckeyes, known for their explosive offenses, seem primed for another dominate season on the offensive side of the ball. The Buckeyes return 3 legitimate Heisman candidates in CJ Stroud (QB), TreVeyon Henderson (RB), and Jaxson Smith-Njigba (WR). On defense, Ohio State returns eight starters from 2021 and will field Top 25 defensive lines and secondaries in 2022. They also draw a fairly easy road schedule, only playing at Michigan State, at Penn State, at Northwestern, and at Maryland. I expect Ohio State to run the table in the regular season, win the Big Ten Championship, and enter the CFB Playoff 13-0 alongside Alabama. Pick: Ohio State to win the National Championship +320.

If you’re worried this “preview” was just going to be me recapping the favorites, not to worry. If you’re looking for some more value for your National Championship ticket, take a look at the 2021 Rose Bowl winner, Utah Utes. Many people write off the Pac-12 when talking about the best teams/conferences in college football, but Kyle Whittingham’s Utes are not to be overlooked. Last year the Utes stumbled early in the year, but after switching to Cameron Rising they ended the year 9-1 in Pac-12 play and finished the year #12 in the AP Poll losing to the highly touted Ohio State Buckeyes in the Rose Bowl. The Utes return 14 starters from that Rose Bowl team including junior quarterback, Cameron Rising. Utah also returns 1,000 yard rusher Tavion Thomas, tight end Brant Kuithe, and a typically strong O-Line. Utah has always bolstered strong defenses under Whittingham. They lose their best defensive player in Devin Lloyd but return six other starters and also bring in Florida’s top tackler in 2021, Mohamoud Diabate, at linebacker. Utah will be strong in 2022 and has very real potential to run the table in the Pac-12 and make the playoff. Pick: Utah to win the National Championship +5000.

Conference Champions

SEC

It’s Ohio State and everyone else. That has been the moniker of the Big Ten for the last decade. Last year, Michigan finally put an end to the Buckeyes reign and secured Harbaugh his first victory over the rival since he was hired back in 2015. It seems as though that Michigan team was one of destiny. Fielding one of the country’s best defenses Michigan lost a lot of talent to the draft and transfer portal in the offseason including #2 overall draft pick Aiden Hutchinson who was the heart and soul of the Michigan team that made it to its first CFB Playoff. Heading into 2022, Ohio State looks unstoppable and poised to dominate the Big Ten on its way to its fifth CFB Playoff appearance. The Buckeyes sit at -225 to win the Big Ten which is far too juicy for me. If you’re looking to make a play on the Big Ten winner I would look at Michigan at 6/1, Wisconsin at 12/1 and Nebraska at 18/1 but I personally won’t be making a play on this conference. Instead I am going to take the Buckeyes over 11 wins at -130. I expect this team to roll through its schedule and finish 12-0 at the end of the year. Worst case scenario, they drop a game and the bet pushes but there is no way I can see the Buckeyes losing 2 games to lose the bet. Ohio State’s toughest games will be to start the year versus Notre Dame, at Michigan State and Penn State in October, and of course Michigan to end the year which they get at home. Ohio State will likely be double digit favorites in all 12 of its games this year. They will also field one of the best offense in the country that will feature 3 Heisman candidates. CJ Stroud, TreVeyon Henderson, and Jaxson Smith-Njigba should keep the offense running like a well oiled machine while the defense also gets an improvement with DC Jim Knowles coming over from Oklahoma State. Pick: Ohio State o11 wins -130.

The Nebraska Cornhuskers were 0-9 in one possession games in 2021. To make things even worse, Nebraska is 5-20 in one score games since Scott Frost became HC. That is almost unfathomable, but it tells me that the Cornhuskers are due for some serious positive regression. In 2021, Nebraska outscored opponents 28-23 on a per game average. They also outgunned opponents by 82 ypg. Despite this, the Cornhuskers were still a disappointing 3-9. In addition to their 9 one possession losses, Nebraska also had wins by 45, 25, and 49 points including a 56-7 beatdown of conference rival Northwestern. For Nebraska, I see 6 games I’m comfortable giving them the victory in. Those games are at home against North Dakota, Georgia Southern, Indiana, Illinois and on the road against Rutgers and Purdue. I would give them the win in Week 1 against Northwestern, but that game will be played in Dublin, Ireland and nothing spells a chaotic college football game like a Week 0 college football game across the pond. I expect Nebraska to lose at home against Oklahoma but that will not be an easy game for the Sooners. Assuming all that happens that leaves a 4 game gauntlet at the end of the year that Nebraska could very well be 6-2 or 7-1 heading into. In November the Cornhuskers will play at home against Minnesota, travel to Ann Arbor to play the Wolverines, Wisconsin at home, and then at Iowa to end the year. It’s a difficult stretch for sure but none of those games will be write offs for the Cornhuskers. I said earlier I would take a look at Nebraska to win the Big Ten if you’re looking for longer odds than what the books are offering on Ohio State, but for this article I am going to stick to their win total. Nebraska is due and I don’t know about you, but I want to be on the right side of history when the Scott Frost of old returns. Pick: Nebraska o7.5 wins -115.

The Maryland Terrapins went 7-6 last year under Mike Locksley. This year, for Locksley’s third season, they return 16 starters including junior quarterback Taulia Tagovailoa. Tagovailoa’s health is going to be a concern as a Maryland quarterback has only started every game 2 years in a row three times in the last 17 years. The offensive line allowed 25 sacks last year but they return all of its starters. This year the offensive line will be the deepest and most experiences Taulia has gotten to play behind. Five of the six losses Maryland had last year were against ranked teams. A more talented and experienced Maryland team should help them break their 10 game losing streak to ranked opponents. I see 6 sure wins for Maryland, which would push the bet of over 6 wins. Maryland opens the year at home against Buffalo and SMU and on the road against Charlotte. That should be a 3-0 start. In Big Ten play, I see Maryland beating Purdue, Northwestern, and Rutgers all at home. That leaves Michigan State and Ohio State at home and road games against Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin, and Penn State for them to get one more win. Pick: Maryland o6 wins +100.

ACC

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Noir City: Chicago — 10-hour marathon of rarities highlights Music Box film festival

After a three-year “intermission,” Noir City: Chicago returns Friday through Sept. 1 at the Music Box Theatre with a lineup of killer B’s — a six-movie marathon of rarities — and an opening-night salute to neo-noir icon James Caan.

Turner Classic Movies host Eddie Muller and his partner in cinematic crime appreciation Alan K. Rode produce and program the traveling festival, which celebrates film noir, a movement born in the ’40s, with a fatalistic perspective and a visual style reflecting that pessimism. Muller, who helms the weekly TCM showcase “Noir Alley,” bills this edition as “Noir Alley Live.”

“I tried to pick films that haven’t been shown yet on TCM,” said Muller, who also founded the Bay Area-based Film Noir Foundation, which co-presents Noir City. “There are films that can be screened in theaters but can’t be shown on TV or cable networks like TCM because they are what’s called out of window — their broadcast rights are no longer available.”

For hard-core noir fans, this year’s main attraction has to be the 10-hour marathon Saturday of B-movie rarities, beginning with “Among the Living” (1941) at 1:30 p.m. and winding up at 10:15 p.m. with “The Argyle Secrets” (1948).

“The marathon is possible because these films are all relatively short, at 64 to 71 minutes each,” Muller said. “I originally wanted to do eight films, but cooler heads prevailed. I want to give noiristas a sense of triumph by getting through a marathon.”

As an added incentive, marathon attendees will receive a passport, to be punched for each film seen. Viewers completing the marathon will be eligible for a prize drawing.

“The Argyle Secrets,” written and directed by Cy Endfield, takes pride of place in the marathon because it’s the latest title restored by the Film Noir Foundation, along with its preservation partner, the UCLA Film & Television Archive. A specialist in politically themed thrillers, and a prot?g? of Orson Welles, Endfield fell victim to the House Committee on Un-American Activities and fled to England to avoid the blacklist.

” ‘Argyle’ is a lighthearted B-movie that’s an ersatz ‘Maltese Falcon,’ but Endfield put in a serious subplot about World War II profiteers,” said Rode, a cinema historian and a charter director of the Film Noir Foundation. “It’s got a great supporting cast of future sitcom favorites such as John Banner [‘Hogan’s Heroes’] and Barbara Billingsley [‘Leave It to Beaver’].”

Noir City: Chicago begins with a 7 p.m. Friday screening of “Thief,” starring James Caan, who died last month.

United Artists

A sub-theme for this year’s Noir City is “They Tried to Warn Us,” with films taking onissues especially relevant today, such as power-crazed politicians (“All the King’s Men,” 1949), corrupt businessmen (“The Argyle Secrets”), serial killers (“The Sniper,” 1952) and police malfeasance — and abortion (“Detective Story,” 1951).

The James Caan tribute came together after the “Godfather” star died July 6 at age 82. Set and filmed in Chicago by director/co-writer Michael Mann in his feature-film debut, “Thief” (1981) gave Caan one of his best roles. “Most neo-noir fans know ‘Thief,’ but I was most psyched to screen ‘Flesh and Bone’ [1993],” Muller said. “It’s very much a noir, with a flashback story to a dark secret in a man’s life. It asks the perennial question: Are the sins of the father visited upon the son?”

The Music Box engagement marks the 12th installment of Noir City: Chicago, which had been shelved since 2019 due to the pandemic. “Chicago will be our the longest festival since COVID,” Muller said. “We did abbreviated versions of the San Francisco and Hollywood festivals earlier this year, but they were just long weekends.”

Edward G. Robinson stars in “Night Has a Thousand Eyes,” another Noir City: Chicago offering. It’s based on a novel by Cornell Woolrich.

Paramount Pictures

As usual, Muller and Rode will introduce each film, with Muller here Friday through Sunday and Rode from Monday to Sept. 1. “We’re glad to be back after the hiatus,” Rode said. “It will be great to see friends and fellow noiristas.”

Rode and Muller appreciate Chicago for being so into noir and its talismen such as cult writer Cornell Woolrich (with two films at the Music Box).

“We can’t program Noir City without [Woolrich] getting in there somehow,” Muller said. “It’s fun that people recognize this stuff now. You can’t say that about many festivals. Our audience understands this.”

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How a $2 billion arena could shape the Clippers-Lakers rivalryon August 25, 2022 at 12:50 pm

INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Steve Ballmer, decked out in a black construction hard hat and yellow safety vest, is standing in a cavernous area where the loading dock of the Intuit Dome will be.

Even though the area is on uneven dirt right now, the LA Clippers owner knows the layout. Ballmer, who visits the construction site monthly, points to where the visiting team’s locker room will be and makes sure to mention one detail in the design plans of the Clippers’ new home.

“As you know, there are back halls in [Crypto.com Arena that connect locker rooms] between visitors,” Ballmer tells ESPN during a tour of the Inglewood construction site in late July.

2 Related

“Yeah, we don’t want that. I’m just going to say that. How about that? We don’t want any back hallways between locker rooms.”

Sorry, Chris Paul, but the NBA’s richest owner isn’t sparing any detail when it comes to his more than $2 billion privately funded arena, scheduled to open for the 2024-25 season. Footing the bill, Ballmer has his fingerprints all over what will be Inglewood’s latest modern sports palace — located across the street from the more than $5 billion SoFi Stadium — with input on everything from the 38,375-square foot halo-shaped LED board to the 640 restrooms (twice as much as any other arena) down to the inches of space between fans’ knees and the seat in front of them.

Ballmer has spent billions on the present and future of the Clippers. He has built an organization poised to compete for the championship this season with Kawhi Leonard expected to return from an ACL injury. The Clippers, though, aren’t just trying to compete with 29 other teams for a title. They have to live and play in a city that has long been a purple and gold town.

LA Clippers owner Steve Ballmer is spending more than $2 billion to privately fund the Intuit Dome. Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images

Ballmer is trying to change that, even if it means planting the Clippers logo in as much pavement as possible. Recently, he and his wife, Connie, celebrated the renovation of 350 public basketball courts, each with a Clippers logo on it, for the current and next generations to play on in Los Angeles. And now he is a couple of years away from giving the franchise its first true home in Southern California, a futuristic L.A. landmark that will be designed to give fans every comfort in hopes of developing an actual home-court advantage.

“I think this’ll be so cool,” Ballmer says when asked if he could have ever imagined the Clippers having their own home after sharing a building in a town that leans heavily toward the Los Angeles Lakers. “And it needs to be. You said this is a Laker town. No. [It’s a] Laker-Clipper [town].

“And someday I want to be able to say Clipper-Laker [town].”

The fist-pumping Ballmer famously gets so excited at games that he has ripped his dress shirt. So it’s a good thing he has a hard hat on during this tour because the giddy Clippers owner can barely remain on his feet when talking about his newest prize — designed to be second to none.

“It’s another statement that says, ‘Hey look, we’re nobody’s little brother,'” Ballmer says. “We’re a real team.”

WHILE THE CONCRETE frame foundation is in, there is one area where steel beams rise up and outward. Here, there is a black and white sign to indicate the landmark of one of Ballmer’s favorite features — “The Wall.”

Ballmer likes to refer to this as “the wall of sound,” where 5,000 fans will fill 51 uninterrupted rows to give the Intuit Dome a student section fieldhouse-feel. The Clippers even brought in sound experts from The Forum — which Ballmer purchased for $400 million from Madison Square Garden Company to clear the path to build the Intuit Dome — to enhance acoustics and make The Wall as formidable of a home-court advantage as possible.

Ballmer has gone over digital renderings of The Wall, but now he can see it coming to life. At the bottom of The Wall is the outline of one baseline marked in green where the basketball court is supposed to be drawn into the dirt ground.

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Looking up toward the steel beams, Ballmer envisions what he wants to see and hear from not just the 18,000 fans that will be in attendance but this specific area.

“You just look 51 rows straight up, literally stands all the way to here,” Ballmer says as he points upward from the baseline where his courtside seat will be underneath a basket.

“‘Clips!” Ballmer shouts, deepening his voice. “‘Let’s go Clips!'”

Ballmer and Clippers executives visited at least 16 NBA arenas and venues overseas in Europe. Members of the organization went to places such as Utah’s Vivint Arena, where the Jazz have one of the loudest crowds in the league. Ballmer attended regular-season and postseason games in Toronto (Scotiabank Arena), Minnesota (Target Center), Dallas (American Airlines Center), Houston (Toyota Center), San Antonio (AT&T Center), Phoenix (Footprint Center), Golden State (Oracle Arena and Chase Center) and Portland (Moda Center), among other places, to see how loud these buildings get and gather details of what makes players, their families and even their agents feel as comfortable as possible.

“You just copy ideas,” Ballmer says. “These guys have a great practice facility. Copy that idea. These guys have great player space. These guys have family spaces. Very important. Because we want our players to say, ‘Yeah, this is our house. … We literally [will have] a [rehab] pool outdoor because we’re here in California.”

Ballmer has obsessed over details, such as how to get fans to the bathroom or to concessions and back to their seats without missing an in-game moment. He wants fans to be able to select concession items as if they’re picking food from their own kitchen and skip lines by paying with technology designed to create a hassle-free experience. There will be 199 game clocks installed around the arena to let fans know when play will resume.

Since purchasing the Clippers for $2 billion in 2014, Ballmer has tried to give his franchise the best that money can buy. But he hasn’t been able to give his team its own home as it shares Crypto.com Arena (formerly Staples Center) with the Lakers, the NHL’s Kings and the WNBA’s Sparks.

With their own arena, the Clippers won’t have to worry about having to play less-than-desirable 12:30 p.m. weekend games — a source of frustration for Clippers players and coaches — while the Lakers or Kings play at night.

For a team with championship hopes, disadvantages like this can impact a title pursuit. The early starts can draw fewer fans.

Starting in 2024, the Clippers will not only have the best times but Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts believes they will have their own city full of fans. Butts scoffed when asked what it will mean for the Clippers to have their own arena in a city filled with Lakers fans.

“Well, first of all, I don’t even think that’s true,” Butts says last month when he and Ballmer celebrated the completion of the Intuit Dome’s concrete frame. “The Lakers left us [The Forum in Inglewood] and they are in Los Angeles.

“I think we have a plethora of Clipper fans. And I think people are going to be so excited because this is going to be the newest and greatest basketball arena in the world.”

The LA Clippers will move to the Intuit Dome in time for the 2024-25 NBA season. Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images

AS THE TOUR winds down, Ballmer begins to walk up a wide dirt ramp back to the top when he is asked about the Clippers’ journey toward trying to win a championship.

This will be Year 4 of the Leonard-Paul George era. The result so far has been the Clippers making their first-ever Western Conference finals in 2020-21, but injuries and the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic have delayed their championship hopes.

Leonard hasn’t played in a game since Game 4 of the Western Conference semifinals against the Jazz on June 14, 2021. And George was limited to just 31 games in 2021-22, missing a good chunk of last season because of an elbow injury. After returning late in the season, George was sidelined by COVID-19 for the Clippers’ play-in loss to New Orleans.

“I’m very excited,” Ballmer says about the Clippers entering this season as one of Las Vegas oddsmakers’ favorites to win it all. “I really think we have a very good team. … We want to compete for championships. We were in position two years ago when Kawhi went down. It’s hard without your best player.

“It’s really hard to win an NBA championship,” Ballmer adds. “But we’ve got a guy who’s done it twice. And you need one of those.”

Ballmer also knows his team needs its own home. And in a couple of seasons, he will have that.

Peering out from where the club level will be and looking down toward a chalk dirt outline of where the basketball court will be, Ballmer allows himself to dream about the possibilities of what’s on the horizon.

“This,” Ballmer says, “is our home, man.”

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How a $2 billion arena could shape the Clippers-Lakers rivalryon August 25, 2022 at 12:50 pm Read More »

Matt Ulery’s Become Giant is a towering addition to the bassist-composer’s catalog

Most bassists have to be chameleons. It’s more or less in the job description when your instrument can be played upright or electric, be bowed or plucked, and appear in settings as disparate as minimal jazz trios and full-blown symphony orchestras. But few bassists shape-shift as effortlessly and as often as Matt Ulery, a Chicago musician and composer who’s a sideman in so many projects that he sometimes seems omnipresent. Unsurprisingly, Ulery’s output as a composer and bandleader is just as multivalent. Last year’s Delicate Charms: Live at the Green Mill evokes the smoky mystique of the Uptown venue, rendered in a big-boned, romantic idiom, while the studio album preceding it, 2020’s Pollinator, is a rumbustious, blow-by-blow throwback to 1920s swing. 

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The music on Ulery’s brand-new Become Giant (on his own Woolgathering label) evolved during nearly five years of performances from a piece he wrote on commission for violinist Nathan Cole of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. It leans more into the harmonies and sensibilities of 20th-century classical, an inspiration evident in the album’s structure: it’s organized suite-style in ten mostly through-written movements (and a coda added later). The unusual instrumentation combines solo violin (Zach Brock), bass (Ulery), and drum kit (Jon Deitemyer) with a string quartet (the Chicago-based Kaia String Quartet). That septet conjures the ultra-decadent sounds of turn-of-the-century Vienna (any Zemlinsky fans out there?) and the impressionistic acrobatics of Ravel’s String Quartet; Brock’s finger-twisting, earthy improvisations cut the sweetness with cathartic tartness. Ulery, Brock, and Deitemyer have gigged together for nearly 20 years, and they recorded as a trio for 2019’s Wonderment (also on Woolgathering). Become Giant pushes their synergy to greater heights while winking at Ulery’s recent output—compare, for example, Kaia’s punchy backing rhythm in the ninth movement of Become Giant to almost identical themes fromWonderment (“Levelled”) or Delicate Charms (“The Arrival”). But while much of Become Giant feels familiar, there are also plenty of twists and turns. Brock muses in the liner notes that the album “allowed me to hear a new sound in my own playing—a sound that wasn’t one or the other, classical or jazz, but just something new.” Become Giant is new, yes, and it’s exhilarating.

Matt Ulery’s Become Giant is available through Bandcamp.

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Matt Ulery’s Become Giant is a towering addition to the bassist-composer’s catalogHannah Edgaron August 25, 2022 at 11:00 am

Most bassists have to be chameleons. It’s more or less in the job description when your instrument can be played upright or electric, be bowed or plucked, and appear in settings as disparate as minimal jazz trios and full-blown symphony orchestras. But few bassists shape-shift as effortlessly and as often as Matt Ulery, a Chicago musician and composer who’s a sideman in so many projects that he sometimes seems omnipresent. Unsurprisingly, Ulery’s output as a composer and bandleader is just as multivalent. Last year’s Delicate Charms: Live at the Green Mill evokes the smoky mystique of the Uptown venue, rendered in a big-boned, romantic idiom, while the studio album preceding it, 2020’s Pollinator, is a rumbustious, blow-by-blow throwback to 1920s swing. 

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.

The music on Ulery’s brand-new Become Giant (on his own Woolgathering label) evolved during nearly five years of performances from a piece he wrote on commission for violinist Nathan Cole of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. It leans more into the harmonies and sensibilities of 20th-century classical, an inspiration evident in the album’s structure: it’s organized suite-style in ten mostly through-written movements (and a coda added later). The unusual instrumentation combines solo violin (Zach Brock), bass (Ulery), and drum kit (Jon Deitemyer) with a string quartet (the Chicago-based Kaia String Quartet). That septet conjures the ultra-decadent sounds of turn-of-the-century Vienna (any Zemlinsky fans out there?) and the impressionistic acrobatics of Ravel’s String Quartet; Brock’s finger-twisting, earthy improvisations cut the sweetness with cathartic tartness. Ulery, Brock, and Deitemyer have gigged together for nearly 20 years, and they recorded as a trio for 2019’s Wonderment (also on Woolgathering). Become Giant pushes their synergy to greater heights while winking at Ulery’s recent output—compare, for example, Kaia’s punchy backing rhythm in the ninth movement of Become Giant to almost identical themes fromWonderment (“Levelled”) or Delicate Charms (“The Arrival”). But while much of Become Giant feels familiar, there are also plenty of twists and turns. Brock muses in the liner notes that the album “allowed me to hear a new sound in my own playing—a sound that wasn’t one or the other, classical or jazz, but just something new.” Become Giant is new, yes, and it’s exhilarating.

Matt Ulery’s Become Giant is available through Bandcamp.

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Matt Ulery’s Become Giant is a towering addition to the bassist-composer’s catalogHannah Edgaron August 25, 2022 at 11:00 am Read More »

Night market, music, Destroy Your Art, and more

The final Argyle Night Market for the season happens tonight from 5-9 PM, filling Argyle Street between Kenmore and Sheridan with food vendors, community booths, local business, activities for the kids, a beer garden, and music. Tonight’s market offers a special tribute to John “Vietnam” Nguyen, a rapper, spoken word artist, student, and activist who grew up in the area and participated in the Chinese Mutual Aid Association’s Multi-Cultural Youth Project. Nguyen attended the University of Wisconsin at Madison, where he had received a scholarship to the university’s First Wave program, which is centered around spoken word and hip-hop culture. He unfortunately drowned in an accident in 2012 in Madison’s Lake Mendota, and the loss was felt far and wide in the communities that he created both at Wisconsin and back home. The Chicago-based artist and activist collective Elephant Rebellion was formed shortly after Nguyen’s death in tribute to his legacy, and members will be performing tonight at the market along with members of Kuumba Lynx, CRASHprez, and other friends. You can find more information at the Argyle Night Market Facebook page. (SCJ)

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.

If you’re looking for music tonight, there’s more than a few options out there–here’s a few! Gates open at 5 PM at the Salt Shed (1357 N. Elston) for an outdoor concert from British R&B singer Jorja Smith, with Chicago rapper Mick Jenkins opening at 7 PM. If you get there on the early side, you can check out a rotating retail market of vendors and grab food or drink from an array of local restaurants and culinary pop-ups. Check out the Salt Shed’s website for a detailed FAQ, and go to Eventbrite for advance tickets. The Beat Kitchen (2100 W. Belmont) boasts an emo-tinged night with Ogbert the Nerd, Arcadia Grey, Superkick, and Snow Ellet. Doors open at 7 PM and the music starts at 8 for this 17+ show; purchase advance tickets at Ticketweb. And multi-instrumentalist Sam Thousand brings a live group to Pilsen Yards (1163 W. 18th St.). There’s no cover, but be prepared to purchase food and/or drink. (SCJ)

Burn, filmmaker, burn! Destroy Your Art invited four independent movie creators to make original short films and then get a chance to destroy them in front of an audience tonight at the Music Box (3733 N. Southport) starting at 7 PM. Reader contributor Kathleen Sachs explains more here, and mentions a blowtorch–let’s hope that everyone remembers their safety masks! A list of the participating filmmakers and advance tickets are available at the Music Box Theatre’s website. (SCJ)

Lincoln Lodge (2040 N. Milwaukee) presents My Best Friend Is Black, a live comedy variety showcase for Black performers. (“Of course, we encourage people of all backgrounds to come out and laugh with us! We also strongly encourage reparation donations from those with 0% melanin, especially if you have a Black Best Friend.”) Showtime is 8 PM, tickets are $12, and proof of vax and masks are required. This month features Ontonio Kareem, Daryn Robinson, and Arlieta Hall. For more information and reservations, see thelincolnlodge.com or eventbrite.com. (KR)

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Night market, music, Destroy Your Art, and moreSalem Collo-Julin and Kerry Reidon August 25, 2022 at 5:25 am

The final Argyle Night Market for the season happens tonight from 5-9 PM, filling Argyle Street between Kenmore and Sheridan with food vendors, community booths, local business, activities for the kids, a beer garden, and music. Tonight’s market offers a special tribute to John “Vietnam” Nguyen, a rapper, spoken word artist, student, and activist who grew up in the area and participated in the Chinese Mutual Aid Association’s Multi-Cultural Youth Project. Nguyen attended the University of Wisconsin at Madison, where he had received a scholarship to the university’s First Wave program, which is centered around spoken word and hip-hop culture. He unfortunately drowned in an accident in 2012 in Madison’s Lake Mendota, and the loss was felt far and wide in the communities that he created both at Wisconsin and back home. The Chicago-based artist and activist collective Elephant Rebellion was formed shortly after Nguyen’s death in tribute to his legacy, and members will be performing tonight at the market along with members of Kuumba Lynx, CRASHprez, and other friends. You can find more information at the Argyle Night Market Facebook page. (SCJ)

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.

If you’re looking for music tonight, there’s more than a few options out there–here’s a few! Gates open at 5 PM at the Salt Shed (1357 N. Elston) for an outdoor concert from British R&B singer Jorja Smith, with Chicago rapper Mick Jenkins opening at 7 PM. If you get there on the early side, you can check out a rotating retail market of vendors and grab food or drink from an array of local restaurants and culinary pop-ups. Check out the Salt Shed’s website for a detailed FAQ, and go to Eventbrite for advance tickets. The Beat Kitchen (2100 W. Belmont) boasts an emo-tinged night with Ogbert the Nerd, Arcadia Grey, Superkick, and Snow Ellet. Doors open at 7 PM and the music starts at 8 for this 17+ show; purchase advance tickets at Ticketweb. And multi-instrumentalist Sam Thousand brings a live group to Pilsen Yards (1163 W. 18th St.). There’s no cover, but be prepared to purchase food and/or drink. (SCJ)

Burn, filmmaker, burn! Destroy Your Art invited four independent movie creators to make original short films and then get a chance to destroy them in front of an audience tonight at the Music Box (3733 N. Southport) starting at 7 PM. Reader contributor Kathleen Sachs explains more here, and mentions a blowtorch–let’s hope that everyone remembers their safety masks! A list of the participating filmmakers and advance tickets are available at the Music Box Theatre’s website. (SCJ)

Lincoln Lodge (2040 N. Milwaukee) presents My Best Friend Is Black, a live comedy variety showcase for Black performers. (“Of course, we encourage people of all backgrounds to come out and laugh with us! We also strongly encourage reparation donations from those with 0% melanin, especially if you have a Black Best Friend.”) Showtime is 8 PM, tickets are $12, and proof of vax and masks are required. This month features Ontonio Kareem, Daryn Robinson, and Arlieta Hall. For more information and reservations, see thelincolnlodge.com or eventbrite.com. (KR)

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Night market, music, Destroy Your Art, and moreSalem Collo-Julin and Kerry Reidon August 25, 2022 at 5:25 am Read More »

Pat Hughes on joining Buck O’Neil, Jos? Cardenal in 2022 Cubs HOF class: ‘I’m amazed’

Cubs radio play-by-play announcer Pat Hughes isn’t used to being acknowledged by 32,000 people at a baseball game. His audience is usually at home or in their cars, letting his soothing voice paint the picture at the stadium.

On Wednesday, when the Wrigley Field faithful learned that Hughes was one of three members of the Cubs Hall of Fame Class of 2022, they rose to their feet for a standing ovation. Hughes said he wasn’t sure what to do. Salute? Wave? He chose the latter.

“That’s another thing about being a Cubs announcer: the audience that we get to perform for every single day is incredibly gracious,” Hughes said, saying he receives thank you messages at the end of every season. “I’m the one thanking you for being a great audience. Because they really are an incredible group of fans, knowledgeable, numerous, passionate, and just the sweetest bunch of people that you could possibly have as a public performer.”

Hughes, Buck O’Neil — who was enshrined in Cooperstown this year — and former outfielder Jos? Cardenal are the newest inductees to the Cubs Hall of Fame. The team plans to unveil their plaques on Sept. 10.

The Cubs opened their new Hall of Fame a year ago, during the Wrigley Field rededication. They added a single 2021 inductee, Margaret Donahue, to go with the 56 honorees in the original Cubs Hall of Fame.

Hughes joins Harry Caray and Jack Brickhouse as the only members of the team’s Hall who served exclusively as broadcasters.

“I’m amazed,” Hughes said. “I’m very pleased. I love history. I love baseball history and Cubs history. And to think that I’m in there with only two other broadcasters, and they’re very prominent and famous and wonderful … to think that I’m the third is very special.”

Cubs president of business operations Crane Kenney broke the news to Hughes on air during the Cubs’ 7-1 winagainst the Cardinals.

Kenney had given Hughes the heads up earlier in the homestand that he was going to join him in the booth to talk about the new Hall of Fame Class. But it didn’t occur to Hughes that he might end up talking about himself.

A Marquee Sports Network camera focussed on Hughes and Kenney in the booth in the top of the third inning.

O’Neil, as a Hall of Famer, automatically got into the Cubs’ version. But of the 14 candidates considered by the voting committee – which was composed of Hall of Famers and select media members – only two were chosen, Kenney explained.

“Jos? was one, and I’ll let you talk about the other one who’s going in, Pat,” Kenney said, handing Hughes a sheet of paper.

Hughes paused, studied the paper, and said: “I think it says, this is me going into the Hall of Fame?”

He later said to Ron Coomer, his partner in the booth, and in an interview a couple innings later: “Rarely am I speechless, but I really was. It came right out of the blue.”

Hughes wished the late Ron Santo, who was his broadcast partner for 15 years, and his parents were still around to share the moment with. But he has his wife, Trish, and daughters, who were in preschool and first grade when Hughes first got his job as a Cubs announcer, to celebrate the honor with him.

The top of the third inning ended with Cardinals star Nolan Arenado having an animated conversation with the home plate umpire after striking out, and quickly being ejected.

“I said, I’m kind of glad this is the way my half-inning ended, with a Cardinal getting booted out of the game,” Hughes recounted with a smile. “It was just one of those things, and he was kind of upset, but I’m glad to see him go. That gives us a better chance of winning.”

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Pat Hughes on joining Buck O’Neil, Jos? Cardenal in 2022 Cubs HOF class: ‘I’m amazed’ Read More »