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Chicago White Sox Sign 2 Time All-Star Short Stop Elvis Andrus

Chicago White Sox add veteran Elvis Andrus to their infield amid injuries

After injuries to both Tim Anderson (torn ligament in hand) and Leury Garcia (lower back strain,) the White Sox added some much needed depth to their infield.  The 33 year old Venezuelan-American is a 13 year veteran, 2 time all-star, with a career batting average of .270 and 87 home runs.

Andrus was recently released by the Oakland Athletics, which left the White Sox with a clear opportunity to give him a shot.  With recent call ups Lenyn Sosa and Romy Gonzalez simply not working out, the decision to sign a veteran like Andrus was a fairly easy one. As a corresponding move, Sosa has been optioned back down to triple AAA Charlotte.

White Sox make the signing of Elvis Andrus official, optioning Lenyn Sosa to Class AAA to make room. Andrus’ contract is for the remainder of the season. He will wear No. 1 on his uniform

Elvis Andrus contract is set for the remainder of the season

It is a difficult task to replace a player like Tim Anderson by bringing up young prospects who are not close to being ready.  In addition, scouring the free agents list in the middle of August for a replacement shortstop is also rarely successful.

Nonetheless, the White Sox managed to land on Elvis Andrus, who plays solid defense and hits for a good average throughout his long career.  It should certainly help the team a lot more than prospects who simply were not ready.  A veteran like Andrus who’s been there and has sustained a fairly long career is a much better bet.

On the 2022 season, in 106 games with the A’s, Andrus has been batting .237, .301, .373, with an OPS of .673.  His glove is also reliable, he holds a .977 fielding percentage on the season with 114 putouts and 262 assists.  Andrus is likely to see steady playing time with the injuries to Anderson and Garcia still prominent.

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That’s the ticket: Sportsbooks are hiring

LAS VEGAS — Fresh out of Colorado State, after a Vegas spring break with college pals had sealed his future, Jay Kornegay settled into his first sportsbook gig.

He wrote tickets at Harrah’s in Lake Tahoe in the fall of 1987, an ancient era since Kornegay hand-wrote those sports tickets for patrons.

As the industry experiences staffing challenges, according to Kornegay and confirmed by competitors, that anecdote might help lure prospects.

“Everybody knew, it took a little time,” Kornegay said inside the Westgate SuperBook, where he presides as vice president of race and sports.

“The worst were future bets, writing out TO WIN SUPER BOWL . . . BRONCOS . . . 10-1. ‘How much, sir? Thirty dollars? Okay. $30.’

”Customer pauses. Can I make that for $40?

“Well . . . I’ll have to write you another ticket.”

Kornegay sighed.

“A process. The dark ages of sports betting. The technology today is so much improved compared to 35 years ago.”

Tellers today tap computer screens that spit out tickets in milliseconds.

Kornegay calls this the worst hiring environment he has ever witnessed.

“We’re very, very short-handed. I saw a tweet the other day saying there were 5,500 jobs available, nationwide, in the sports-betting market right now. Wow.”

Golden Nugget sportsbook director Tony Miller concurs about the difficulty filling vacancies. Circa Sports operations manager Jeff Benson says he often needs part-timers, but his full-time roster is filled.

South Point director Chris Andrews, who oversees the rare 24-hour book, worries about his schedules. This week, however, he seemed close to hiring a few people.

“We should be in decent shape for football. Probably not quite where we’d want it to be, but we’ll make do. If everybody works out, I’ll be OK. But they don’t always work out.

“If some of us have to work some overtimes, things like that, we’ll make it work.”

THE FRONT LINE

In 2004, two days after a five-minute interview secured the job, Dave Sharapan began writing tickets at the Golden Nugget. They trained him for maybe 15 minutes. His first shift was a Saturday, 4 p.m. to midnight.

Management turned the book into a dance floor, he said, with live music. He tried concentrating. The thumping music made writing parlays a chore, but he relished the scene.

Johnny Avello first wrote tickets at the Las Vegas Hilton (now Westgate), rising at Bally’s and Wynn Las Vegas. Today, he oversees DraftKings sportsbook operations in Illinois and 14 other states.

In his teller-hiring experience, he says ambition and attitude are key.

“People who are teachable, someone who will be a solid employee. An experienced person can be set in his ways, doing it the way he wants. You must find someone who fits.”

INQUIRE WITHIN

Not so long ago, writing tickets broke people into the business.

“Then you’re in administration, then you’re a risk manager,” Kornegay said, “then you go beyond that. In today’s world, we can stick you wherever we think you have the ability to learn.

“We have several people who started right into risk. In the old days, it would take you four or five years to get that position. Things have changed.”

It does help to have sports knowledge and mathematical aptitude.

“They have to have something on the ball,” Andrews said. “Those who don’t have experience have to at least look trainable. It is a bit specialized; we do handle millions of dollars.

“You can’t tell someone, ‘Yeah, come on in, take a bet and move the numbers.’ It isn’t that way. I wish it . . . well, glad it isn’t — they wouldn’t need me.”

Kornegay pinpoints eight vacancies, in administration and risk supervision, and five or six open teller, or ticket-writer, positions at the SuperBook.

He knows many businesses, from restaurants to retail outlets, are hunting for the same entry-level candidates.

“It’s very competitive,” Kornegay said, “so we’ve added a few incentives to attract some of these people. But it really hasn’t panned out so far.”

The irony of that spring ’87 venture? Kornegay was the only one who had picked any sunny Mexican coast for an adventure. His seven buddies were unanimous — Vegas.

And he was the one who landed the career direction. Now a grizzled veteran, he hopes to find candidates, just like his former self, seeking such a vocational rudder.

“We’ll have all hands on deck,” he said. “It isn’t our first rodeo. We’ll get people out there.”

Kornegay laughed.

“You might see me writing tickets!”

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Colin Blackwell’s Blackhawks contract the latest height in journey from hockey’s brink

The contract Colin Blackwell signed with the Blackhawks in July — two years at $1.2 million annually — made no ripples in the NHL’s summer news cycle.

For Blackwell, however, that payday was the payoff for more than a ”little bit of perseverance.”

At 29, Blackwell finally is locked into a fully one-way contract for the first time. It’s with the team nearest his adopted hometown of Milwaukee, where he lives in the offseasons with his fianc?e. And it came almost a decade after the most difficult period of his life, during which he not only figured but accepted his hockey career was over.

”It meant the world,” he said. ”I’ve obviously been working really hard for a long time. And it’s something players always strive for, no matter the obstacles that get in their way.”

Blackwell, a native of Massachusetts, was drafted by the Sharks in the seventh round in 2011 and followed that up with a promising freshman season at Harvard.

During his 2012-13 sophomore year, however, two concussions suffered months apart left him stuck with symptoms of post-concussion syndrome and eventually kept him away from the rink for two full years.

He was forced to withdraw from college for the 2013-14 school year and, upon returning in 2014-15, was thinking more about acquiring his Harvard degree and finding a job than lacing up skates again.

”My focus in the beginning was trying to get back to playing hockey,” Blackwell said. ”But as time went on, I became more focused on getting back to being myself, to being a normal human being and to what I used to be when I first stepped on campus. I was trying to get rid of the headaches and vertigo and different feelings that stuff can bring on.

”Hockey was very much an afterthought. I definitely already had it in my head that I’d already played my last game.After a certain point, it wasn’t even a matter of, ‘Will I ever be playing again?’ It was, ‘Will I ever be back healthy again?’ ”

While majoring in government and minoring in psychology, Blackwell considered careers in fields ranging from finance to real estate to the FBI.

But shaking his hockey roots proved difficult. He often tells a story of a political-science professor at Harvard asking him after one particular lecture whether he considered himself left wing or right wing — a question to which he responded, ”I’ve always been a natural center.”

”You don’t get to this level without hockey consuming your life, so it was always on my mind, and I thought somebody was asking about it,” he said, laughing at the memory. ”My family wasn’t too proud of me when I told [them] that story.”

Eventually, in the winter of 2015, Blackwell felt himself getting over a hump in his concussion recovery and began reconsidering whether hockey might be possible.

After building back his conditioning and taking contact in practice without any issues, he made an unlikely return to Harvard’s lineup in late February, finishing with six points in 11 games. Granted an extra year of NCAA eligibility for 2015-16, he notched another 19 points in 28 games, disappointing himself in terms of his production but reassuring himself in terms of staying healthy for a whole season.

”I was grateful for that last year to get my feet wet, to get back into it,” he said. ”I knew it was just the way it was. I wasn’t going to be a top prospect, [not] the way maybe I was a couple of years before. But I believed in myself, and I just needed a chance. So I just tried to look at the game from a different perspective.”

Blackwell finally broke into the NHL with the Predators in 2019 and 2020.

AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

That new perspective has lifted him from stop to stop in the pro game during the past six years.

He taught himself how to play a grinding fourth-line style in 2016-17 with the Sharks’ affiliate in the American Hockey League. That led to a bigger opportunity in 2017-18 with the Sabres’ AHL affiliate, where he erupted for 45 points in 61 games.

That led to his first two-way NHL contract with the Predators, where he remained a prolific AHL playmaker and evolved into an NHL depth option, making 33 appearances across two seasons. That led to a contract with the Rangers, with whom he established himself as a full-time NHL forward in the COVID-shortened 2021 season, tallying 22 points in 47 games.

That led to his selection by the Kraken in the expansion draft and, later, his inclusion in the headline-generating trade of Mark Giordano to the Maple Leafs. And a second consecutive solid NHL campaign — 20 points in 58 games in 2021-22 — led him to Chicago.

”Versatility gave me my opportunity,” Blackwell said. ”[I can be] whatever the staff needs, whether it’s left wing, right wing or center. . . . I’ve played a checking role; I’ve played a defensive role; I’ve played a more offensive role; I’ve had some power-play and penalty-kill time. Over the years, I’ve been [not only] a Swiss Army knife but a chameleon, as well, blending into different players and trying to read off them. It’s just the way I play the game.”

That versatility will be valuable with the Hawks as new coach Luke Richardson tries to piece together a competitive forward lineup. Blackwell logically slots in as the third-line center in the initial depth chart, but he probably will spend time in all sorts of roles before April rolls around.

His defensive and forechecking metrics have been impressive. Per 60 even-strength minutes on the Kraken last season, he allowed only 23.5 scoring chances (per Natural Stat Trick), best among team forwards, and averaged 5.7 forecheck pressures and 3.9 forechecking puck retrievals (per All Three Zones), both well above the league average.

He has won a solid 50% of 326 career faceoffs, too. And despite his relatively small 5-9, 190-pound frame, he dished out 91 hits last season.

”I don’t really compete against other people,” he said. ”I compete against myself to get better every day.”

This offseason has involved training to improve his skills when in possession, focusing on gathering pucks smoothly off the boards, protecting the puck once on his stick and making cutbacks toward the middle to create time and space.

But it also has included the launch of his own apparel brand, ”CB43,” which demonstrates better just how far his career has come since his days researching how to join the FBI.

”I wouldn’t say I necessarily took [hockey] for granted when I was younger, but until you have something taken away from you, sometimes you don’t realize the privilege we have,” Blackwell said. ”It reminds you how much you do truly love it.”

Offseason update

The Hawks signed 23-year-old forward Cole Guttman, who captained the University of Denver to the 2022 NCAA championship, to a two-year contract Thursday. Originally a Lightning draft pick, Guttman had 45 points in 41 games last season for Denver and likely will play at Rockford of the AHL this season.

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Christopher Morel atones for error with go-ahead two-run homer as Cubs beat Brewers

Like many talented youngsters, Christopher Morel tried to make a strong, long throw from shortstop that had no chance of nailing Willy Adames.

Adames’ hit scored the tying run and moved him into scoring position because of Morel’s errant throw.

But as part of the Cubs’ rebuilding process, manager David Ross is looking to see which players overcome their mistakes with an eye on the future.

Morel wasted little time Friday, as he pulled a two-run homer down the left-field line that enabled the Cubs to seize a wacky 8-7 victory over the Brewers.

“There’s a saying, ‘One pitch could change everything,’ ” Morel said. “So God gave me the opportunity, and I was able to take that pitch and make a big hit.”

The Cubs (51-67) showed their composure and resiliency against a Brewers team (63-55) trying to secure no worse than a National League wild-card berth.

That’s why Morel’s homer provided more encouragement for the future as the Cubs extended their winning streak to four games.

“I think he turns the page quickly,” Ross said. “I think he wants to be great and perfect, like they all do. I think he’s got this kid-type energy when he plays, it’s on to the next thing.

“It’s really good. He’s got that adrenaline that ‘I can make every play,’ and I think it takes experience to learn the ones you want to make. Even in the outfield, the smart throws, the ones you want to take the risk.

“But he turns the page very quickly. He’s engaged in every pitch. You watch his body language. He’s never down on himself. He smacks the glove and is right back at it. He does carry with that within, which is impressive for a young guy.”

Morel has made 40 of his 72 starts in center field. But with the Cubs in a stretch of 20 games in 19 days without a scheduled day off through Aug. 31 (including five against the first-place Cardinals and five more against the Brewers), Ross elected to give Nico Hoerner a rest and start Morel at short for only the third time.

Morel started his professional career as a shortstop but has played third, second and center as team officials assess where the team is best served. The emergence of Hoerner as an exceptional defender and a productive hitter who makes contact frequently also has necessitated Morel moving to other positions.

“I’m just trying to keep it simple,” Morel said of returning to short. “Just try to catch the ball and make an accurate throw to first.”

Morel entered the game in a 1-for-15 slump, but he hit a single with one out in the second and scored on a sacrifice fly by Seiya Suzuki.

But “he got a lot of confidence with that home run,” Ross said.

And so did the Cubs, who overcame three deficits and a short outing from Keegan Thompson, who tied his career high with three homers allowed in only 3? innings.

“We’re going to find out what we’re made of,” said Nick Madrigal, who continued his rebirth with three hits. “As of late, we’re playing great baseball. We have some good teams coming up, but I’d run this team out there with anyone right now. We’re playing good baseball and hope to keep it going.”

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White Sox unravel vs. Indians, drop series opener

CLEVELAND — A day after giving up 21 runs and 25 hits to the Astros, the White Sox struck out 14 times against Guardians right-hander Triston McKenzie Friday night.

Posting monster numbers as such is a scary-bad way to win a pennant race.

McKenzie gave up a pair of runs in the first inning of the first game of an important series between the AL Central leading Guardians and third-place Sox. Then he went on a strikeout rampage, racking up a career high 14 with no walks in seven innings.

After McKenzie’s final pitch, the young Guardians (64-55) sent 10 pesky hitters to the plate in a four-run seventh, the Sox unraveled in a 5-2 loss, dropping them 3 1/2 games behind in the chase for first. Sox reliever Reynaldo Lopez gave up a double to Luke Maile, a tying triple to Steven Kwan and a go-ahead single to Amed Rosario, and lefty Jake Diekman walked two batters on 3-2 counts before giving up a two-run single to Andres Gimenez.

The Sox, who lost their third in a row, should have got to McKenzie when they had him staggered early. But they failed to tack on after scoring two in the first, an inning that ended with Yasmani Grandal rapping into a double play with runners on the corners. The game started with AJ Pollock’s single on the first pitch, Eloy Jimenez’s double, Jose Abreu’s infield RBI single and Yoan Moncada’s lined RBI single.

After that, McKenzie (9-9, 3.11 ERA) racked up the strikeouts, matching his career high 12th by fanning Abreu and Moncada in the sixth, capping a roll of five strikeouts in six batters. He finished the seventh and his night striking out Elvis Andrus and Josh Harrison.

The Sox had a prime chance in the fifth when Josh Harrison led off with a double and advanced to third on a wild pitch, but Seby Zavala, AJ Pollock and Andrew Vaughn struck out in order, for the eighth, ninth and 10th strikeouts by McKenzie.

Lance Lynn was very good for the Sox, allowing one run in 5 2/3 innings. It came on a home run by Jose Ramirez in the sixth. Lynn, lowering his ERA to 3.06 over his last six starts, struck out six.

Sox hitters struck out 17 times.

Blood and guts

Vaughn was hit in the face by a pitch from Cleveland reliever Trevor Stephan in the eighth inning. The pitch caromed off Vaughn’s shoulder and bloodied Vaughn’s lip, but Vaughn took his base at first. Gavin Sheets took Vaughn’s position in right field.

Jimenez exits during at-bat

Jimenez, batting after Vaughn, left the game after the first pitch, appearing to be in some pain after a swing and a miss.

Jimenez has managed intermittent discomfort in his hamstring area after having surgery to repair a tear in April.

Robert still out

Center fielder Luis Robert missed his seventh straight start with a sore left wrist. La Russa said Robert could be inserted after taking full batting practice, but Robert didn’t look completely comfortable swinging, taking his hand off the bat on some swings.

Robert wants to play, but there is a concern the soreness causes him to alter his swing which could create problems with it when he gets back to full strength.

La Russa again downplayed playing with a short bench, which could have been avoided had Robert gone on the 10-day injured list.

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Week 2 takeaways: Patriots’ Mac Jones leads 81-yard TD drive, Justin Fields sharp for Bearson August 20, 2022 at 3:50 am

play

Siemian finds Tonges as Bears extend lead (0:20)Trevor Siemian connects with Jake Tonges, who lunges past the goal line to score the 2-yard touchdown. (0:20)

The Seattle Seahawks and Chicago Bears kicked off Week 2 of the preseason Thursday in Seattle.

Second-year quarterback Justin Fields looked sharp for the Bears in his lone drive to begin the game, while Seahawks starter Geno Smith and the offensive unit struggled to pick up first downs in their first couple of drives.

Chicago was able to set the tone early to earn its second win in the preseason, while Seattle went the entire first quarter without getting a first down. The Seahawks were finally able to get one on their third drive, before punting the ball away for a third time.

Smith, vying for the starting job once the season starts, played the entire first half in an attempt to make his case.

Week 2 will continue Friday with three more games before wrapping up on Monday Night Football with the Atlanta Falcons at the New York Jets (8 p.m. ET, ESPN).

Here are the biggest takeaways from the Thursday night game, along with the rest of the Week 2 preseason schedule:

Quick links:Full schedule PickCenter

NFL preseason game Thursday, Aug. 18

Bears: The Bears’ starting offense saw limited action on a short week and was done after 10 plays in Seattle. Fields strung together an opening drive that culminated in a field goal — the first-team unit’s first scoring drive of the preseason — after he went 5-for-7 for 39 yards. Fields didn’t have more than three completions on any of his first offensive possessions in 2021 and threw for 39 (or more) yards on an opening drive only once (Week 6 against the Green Bay Packers), a sign that his execution and operation of the offense are coming along.

Fields is being pressured at one of the highest rates in the NFL (44% of his dropbacks) while Chicago is still trying to sort out its offensive line, notably with Teven Jenkins now in the mix to start at right guard. But we can already see the tendencies of this new-look Bears scheme take shape. The expectation of a heavy dose of play-action and bootlegs showed up Thursday with two of Field’s pass attempts coming on designed rollouts, including his 19-yard completion to tight end Cole Kmet. Last season, Fields had only 18 attempts on designed rollouts, and he completed 78% of those with two touchdowns. — Courtney Cronin

Next game: at Cleveland, 7 p.m. ET, Aug. 27

Seahawks: The Seahawks’ quarterback competition seems no closer to being decided after their ugly loss to the Bears. With COVID-19 sidelining Drew Lock for what would have been his first start of the summer, Smith had a chance to widen his lead but he didn’t do anything with it.

Seattle’s six full possessions (excluding the final one in the closing seconds of the first half) with Smith under center ended with five punts (three of them after three-and-outs) and a missed 47-yard field goal. Not that it was all Smith’s fault. He was victimized by three drops and several penalties. He also had Tyler Lockett and DK Metcalf on the field for just one possession, then lost starting left guard Damien Lewis to an ankle injury.

Smith then watched the second half with an ice wrap over his right knee. Lock’s bout with COVID was a significant setback in his quest to overtake Smith, but Smith’s underwhelming night keeps the door open. Lock will need a strong showing in next week’s preseason finale at Dallas to convince coach Pete Carroll that he’s the guy — and he probably needs Smith to struggle again as well. — Brady Henderson

Next game: at Dallas, 8 p.m. ET, Aug. 26

NFL preseason games Friday

Carolina Panthers at New England Patriots: 7 p.m. ET, NFL NetworkNew Orleans Saints at Green Bay Packers: 8 p.m. ETHouston Texans at Los Angeles Rams: 10 p.m. ET, NFL Network

NFL preseason games Saturday

Denver Broncos at Buffalo Bills: 1 p.m. ET, NFL NetworkDetroit Lions at Indianapolis Colts: 1 p.m. ETWashington Commanders at Kansas City Chiefs: 4 p.m. ET, NFL NetworkTampa Bay Buccaneers at Tennessee Titans: 7 p.m. ET, NFL NetworkLas Vegas Raiders at Miami Dolphins: 7 p.m. ETSan Francisco 49ers at Minnesota Vikings: 7 p.m. ETPittsburgh Steelers at Jacksonville Jaguars: 7 p.m. ETDallas Cowboys at Los Angeles Chargers: 10 p.m. ET, NFL Network

NFL preseason games Sunday

Philadelphia Eagles at Cleveland Browns: 1 p.m. ET, NFL NetworkCincinnati Bengals at New York Giants: 7 p.m. ET, NFL NetworkBaltimore Ravens at Arizona Cardinals: 8 p.m. ET, Fox

NFL preseason games Monday

Atlanta Falcons at New York Jets: 8 p.m. ET, ESPN

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Las Comadres, tenants rights, Call Me Elizabeth, and more

Wanna learn more about community groups organizing around issues like tenants rights and the cop academy? The Humboldt Park Housing Project (HPHP), a group fighting for affordable housing for low-income residents, is holding a teach-in at their headquarters (1629 N. Washtenaw). HPHP has been living in vacant public housing since January and is currently fighting with the Chicago Housing Authority, who has tried to forcibly remove them so they can sell the properties to developers. Not only will they provide an update on their campaign and ways to get involved, but they’ll be hosting workshops led by other organizers, such as New Era Young Lords, North Spaulding Renters’ Association, and Chicago Union of the Homeless (to name a few!). The day runs from 2-10 PM, and includes free food and drinks, a movie screening, and a dance party. Check out the HPHP’s Instagram for the complete schedule. (MC)

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.

Latina stories are front and center in Las Comadres of Theater and Comedy, featuring six leading writers and performers in two shows today benefiting IC U/Latinas, a social enterprise program for Latina entrepreneurs run through Letty Velez of Velez Global Enterprises. The half dozen heavy hitters include comedians Jesnaira Baez and Alicia Molina, actor and activist Tamika Lecheé Morales, former WGN host, comedian, and (recently) political candidate Patti Vasquez, UrbanTheater Company artistic director Miranda González, and actor/comedian Susana Rodriguez. It all takes place at Vittum Theater (1012 N. Noble) at 3 and 7 PM. Tickets are $40 and available at Eventbrite. (KR)

If HBO’s The Last Movie Stars whetted your appetite for tales of old Hollywood, then Theo Ubique has you covered this weekend with Call Me Elizabeth. Kayla Boye wrote and performs this solo piece about Elizabeth Taylor circa 1961 (just after winning the Oscar for Butterfield 8), talking to unseen biographer Max Lerner during a pivotal time in her life. Her current husband, Eddie Fisher, is playing Vegas and won’t stop calling, while she can’t stop thinking about her costar in the troubled production of Cleopatra she’s supposed to rejoin—Richard Burton. (She also keeps the champagne and pills flowing as she unloads about her troubled life.) Boye’s piece has made the rounds at several Fringe festivals, and popped up during the pandemic as a digital production presented through Porchlight. Boye, who is based in Chicago, brings it home for two nights to Theo Ubique (721 W. Howard, Evanston), tonight at 7:30 PM and Sunday at 2:30 PM. Tickets are $25 at theo-u.com. (KR)

The premiere of CTAnarchy, a locally-made, hour-long documentary about painting CTA trains, is happening tonight outside the Fulton Market Lofts (350 N. Ogden). Billy the Kid will perform at 8 PM, then the movie screens at 9 PM. Throughout the evening, there will also be live painting happening. In the event of rain, the screening will move into the Fulton Market basement studios. No cost, all love. (MC)

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Las Comadres, tenants rights, Call Me Elizabeth, and moreMicco Caporale and Kerry Reidon August 20, 2022 at 12:17 am

Wanna learn more about community groups organizing around issues like tenants rights and the cop academy? The Humboldt Park Housing Project (HPHP), a group fighting for affordable housing for low-income residents, is holding a teach-in at their headquarters (1629 N. Washtenaw). HPHP has been living in vacant public housing since January and is currently fighting with the Chicago Housing Authority, who has tried to forcibly remove them so they can sell the properties to developers. Not only will they provide an update on their campaign and ways to get involved, but they’ll be hosting workshops led by other organizers, such as New Era Young Lords, North Spaulding Renters’ Association, and Chicago Union of the Homeless (to name a few!). The day runs from 2-10 PM, and includes free food and drinks, a movie screening, and a dance party. Check out the HPHP’s Instagram for the complete schedule. (MC)

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.

Latina stories are front and center in Las Comadres of Theater and Comedy, featuring six leading writers and performers in two shows today benefiting IC U/Latinas, a social enterprise program for Latina entrepreneurs run through Letty Velez of Velez Global Enterprises. The half dozen heavy hitters include comedians Jesnaira Baez and Alicia Molina, actor and activist Tamika Lecheé Morales, former WGN host, comedian, and (recently) political candidate Patti Vasquez, UrbanTheater Company artistic director Miranda González, and actor/comedian Susana Rodriguez. It all takes place at Vittum Theater (1012 N. Noble) at 3 and 7 PM. Tickets are $40 and available at Eventbrite. (KR)

If HBO’s The Last Movie Stars whetted your appetite for tales of old Hollywood, then Theo Ubique has you covered this weekend with Call Me Elizabeth. Kayla Boye wrote and performs this solo piece about Elizabeth Taylor circa 1961 (just after winning the Oscar for Butterfield 8), talking to unseen biographer Max Lerner during a pivotal time in her life. Her current husband, Eddie Fisher, is playing Vegas and won’t stop calling, while she can’t stop thinking about her costar in the troubled production of Cleopatra she’s supposed to rejoin—Richard Burton. (She also keeps the champagne and pills flowing as she unloads about her troubled life.) Boye’s piece has made the rounds at several Fringe festivals, and popped up during the pandemic as a digital production presented through Porchlight. Boye, who is based in Chicago, brings it home for two nights to Theo Ubique (721 W. Howard, Evanston), tonight at 7:30 PM and Sunday at 2:30 PM. Tickets are $25 at theo-u.com. (KR)

The premiere of CTAnarchy, a locally-made, hour-long documentary about painting CTA trains, is happening tonight outside the Fulton Market Lofts (350 N. Ogden). Billy the Kid will perform at 8 PM, then the movie screens at 9 PM. Throughout the evening, there will also be live painting happening. In the event of rain, the screening will move into the Fulton Market basement studios. No cost, all love. (MC)

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Las Comadres, tenants rights, Call Me Elizabeth, and moreMicco Caporale and Kerry Reidon August 20, 2022 at 12:17 am Read More »

Elvis Andrus happy to be playing ‘meaningful’ games for White Sox

CLEVELAND — Going around the league with the surrendering Oakland Athletics was kind of a drag, so coming to the White Sox, a disappointing team but one with a shot at the postseason, lightened Elvis Andrus’ outlook on the final six weeks of the season.

“We were rebuilding, it’s always a tough one, especially for me,” said Andrus, who played his first game with the Sox against the Guardians Friday after signing a deal for the rest of the season. “I want to be in this environment. I want to be competing for the playoffs. Every day counts, meaningful games. I am really happy and pumped up to be here.”

Released by the Athletics Wednesday, the Sox pounced on Andrus and got him for a prorated minimum salary for the rest of the season. With All-Star shortstop Tim Anderson likely out until the last week of the season after having surgery on his middle finger Aug. 11, the Sox were forced to play rookies Romy Gonzalez and Lenyn Sosa at shortstop when Leury Garcia went on the injured list this week.

Sosa was optioned to Triple-A Charlotte to make room for a player with two All-Star appearances, two World Series appearances and a career .270/.326/.369 hitting line.

“He’s got a lot of game left,” manager Tony La Russa said of Andrus, who turns 34 next Friday. “He plays the whole game, still fields well, can run the bases, has a knack for getting hits against good pitchers. Played in a couple World Series [one against La Russa’s Cardinals in 2011]. We’re thrilled to get him here.”

Andrus also has slightly better numbers in the second half over his 14-year career and has hit well against the Guardians (.342/.409/.518 with a .927 OPS) and Twins (.281/.323/.392 with a .715 OPS), the teams the Sox need to overtake to win the soft AL Central.

“Yeah, I love it,” said Andrus, who popped out in his first at-bat as a Sox but said the ball has always looked huge to him at Progressive Field for some reason. “That was one of the things I saw when I signed with the team, ‘Ah, we’re going to play in Cleveland.’ I was like, ‘OK, that’s not bad, that’s not a bad place to start for me.’ Same thing with Minnesota. I always play really good against them.”

Andrus, with some of his Athletics gear at his locker in the visitors clubhouse, was at ease chatting away with Eloy Jimenez, Jose Abreu and others before the game. He batted seventh against the Guardians and right-hander Triston McKenzie.

“People talk about the player, the winner, the character that he has,” La Russa said. “So he’s going to fit right into our culture. We’re lucky to get him. Big debt of gratitude to the front office.”

Andrus played with second baseman Josh Harrison in Oakland last season, so there is familiarity in the middle of the infield. And he played behind the Sox’ Friday starter, Lance Lynn, in Texas.

“That’s the guy you want on the mound every four or five days,” Andrus said. “Unbelievable and kind of funny, my first game he’s going to be pitching. It’s going to make me feel a lot more comfortable for sure.”

Perhaps Andrus can help keep whatever spark the Sox (20-13 in their last 33 games) have had going. At the very least, he adds sound defense and a proven bat and locks down a premium position in a pennant race.

“The one thing that you appreciate, when you play many years, is having the opportunity to play meaningful games in September,” Andrus said. “That’s what I love the most about this game. It takes away the whole business and money side and you concentrate and do whatever you can that day to win. It’s all about winning. Do whatever you can that day to win.”

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’Art is the fuel for all things’

Credit: Coco Picard

Editor’s note: for this issue, Coco Picard talked to Chicago artist and professor Nick Cave about his art practice and work, as well as his exhibition “Forothermore.” Edited text from the comic is transcribed here to ease readability.

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The artist, activist, and educator Nick Cave’s first retrospective, “Forothermore,” is on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago through October 2. Spanning three decades of work, this immersive exhibition includes installations, video, and sculpture, as well as the Soundsuit series–inspired by the beating of Rodney King in 1992–and the debut of the Soundsuit 9:29 series–inspired by the death of George Floyd.

Throughout the show, Cave mixes fashion, found objects, sculpture, textiles, and more to address issues of race, gender, sexuality, and class. Curated by Naomi Beckwith, “Forothermore” will travel to New York this fall and open at the Guggenheim Museum on November 18. Cave spoke to the Reader about his work and process.

Nick Cave: “Standing in this show illustrates my own commitment to this purpose. While it’s 30 years of work in this vein, it is also 30 years of being fueled by this issue of being othered.

“I want to be sure we flip the other into a fueled way of looking at oneself as a change agent.

Tondos are large immersive objects that one can find purpose and power within, even while they show catastrophic happenings on their surface.

“A sculpture asks you to move around it, and a performance shares the movement to a stationary audience member. Both require movement and shared space.

“Art is the fuel for all things. Thought. Drive. Beauty. Power. Change. Love.”


Dressed to dazzle

Nothing like an opening at the Museum of Contemporary Art to showcase the exceptional style Chicagoans have, in all their diversity. The festivities in May celebrating artist Nick Cave’s solo exhibition “Forothermore” were no exception. Body coverings were a central theme and could be appreciated on every level: on guests’ outfits in their special post-lockdown…


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Nick Cave, artist and academic, was doing the out-of-town-visitor thing, watching the fish feeding at the Shedd Aquarium with a few friends, when the law swooped down on him. “All of a sudden I was embraced by four undercover cops,” he recalls. “They were saying ‘Stay calm, stay calm, we don’t want to embarrass you,’…

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’Art is the fuel for all things’ Read More »