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A Look Back at the Restaurants We Lost During the PandemicLynette Smithon September 8, 2021 at 3:38 pm

As we move from summer into fall, it seems that the worst of the wave of COVID-related restaurant closures is behind us. While more places will surely struggle because of staffing troubles, case surges, and economic hardship, the absolute mess that was 2020 will not (I hope) be repeated. For me, that means it’s an appropriate time to look back at some of my favorite restaurants that closed over the past 18 months.

Income Tax

Income Tax was one of my all-time favorite Chicago restaurants. From their hyper-modern opening menu to their later days with a more French comfort-food bent, everything that came out of that kitchen was awesome. More importantly, as so many new places claim to be “neighborhood restaurants with a fine dining feel,” Income Tax actually was, welcoming Edgewater residents with a great atmosphere and one of the best, affordable wine lists in Chicago. Plus, they made my favorite chicken dish ever.

Maude’s Liquor Bar

I’ll be honest — while I’ve enjoyed many meals at Hogsalt Restaurants, none of them ever became true favorites except Maude’s. Something about the dark, candle-lit interior, silvered mirrors, and perfectly cooked French bistro food hit every button for me, from the salads to the pristine seafood. I can’t count the number of times I made myself feel better after a bad day with their dry-aged ribeye, and I’ll miss their tiny bar, which was ideal for a quick after-work drink.

Farmhouse

I’ve written so many stories about Farmhouse in River North over the years, I can’t quite believe it’s gone. From the rooftop garden to its own brand of cider, Farmhouse was one of the few restaurants that treated local eating like more than a flashy trend, while also managing to keep prices reasonable and food approachable. The cheese curds were like an old friend, and the beer list never failed to impress. Luckily, the restaurant’s other outlets, in Evanston and Lake View, remain open, but they aren’t quite the same.

Bar Biscay

This one hurts. When Bar Biscay opened, it served the sort of food that made me feel like I was back in Spain, and I sung its praises pretty much continually. Mfk, from the same team, was always an intimate favorite, but Bar Biscay was their attempt to take that simple, ingredient-focused vision to another level. And it worked — the place was packed — but that sort of food just doesn’t lend itself to takeout. It managed to soldier on through the beginning of lockdown, transforming into a sort of gourmet grocery market, but it just couldn’t make it to the end.

Passerotto

Passerotto is the only restaurant on this list that I only went to once — but that one visit made such an impression that I had hoped to be dining there for years to come. Jennifer Kim’s vision of a modern Korean-inspired eatery turned out perfect dish after perfect dish, and somehow managed to make food that was both super comforting and super interesting.

This has barely scratched the surface — other painful losses for me included Fountainhead, Café Cancale, Bad Hunter, Blackbird, and many others. It’s just another reason to treasure every great meal, and, if you have a favorite spot, go there now, rather than waiting for a special occasion.

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A Look Back at the Restaurants We Lost During the PandemicLynette Smithon September 8, 2021 at 3:38 pm Read More »

Sandra Cisneros Takes an Honest Look at ChicagoLynette Smithon September 8, 2021 at 3:54 pm

Oh my God, finally!” Sandra Cisneros exhales in relief. The acclaimed writer and this interviewer are experiencing technical issues on an international call. After several tries, we eventually connect. “Sometimes that happens because I’m in another country. There’s nothing we can do about that,” she says in a serene tone. The telephone line crackles and hisses for a second.

A Chicago native, Cisneros, the author of the beloved young adult novel The House on Mango Street, the historical saga Caramelo, multiple volumes of poetry, short stories, and so much more, moved to Mexico from Texas eight years ago. San Miguel de Allende, the town where she lives, not quite four hours by car northwest of Mexico City, is home to many artists.

It “just felt like Greece, and it felt like Mexico,” says Cisneros, who describes herself as a working-class Mexican American writer. “I felt happiest when I was living on an island in Greece, and [San Miguel de Allende] also reminded me of my childhood memories.”

Cisneros and her six brothers moved around Chicago a lot with her parents when she was a kid, and they also went back and forth between Chicago and Mexico Mexico City, where her grandparents lived. As an adult, Cisneros, who has received a MacArthur “genius” grant, the National Medal of Arts, and numerous other accolades, has a complicated relationship with her hometown.

“My good memories are, like, now. You know, I don’t have good memories of Chicago when I lived there,” says Cisneros, explaining she still has family here she visits often. She speaks with a hint of sadness in her voice. “It’s harder to go back, and the communities you care about are still neglected. There’s a lot of grief every time I come back to Chicago. … And I see what conditions are for Black and brown people, and it’s depressing.”

In September, Vintage published Cisneros’s new novella, Martita, I Remember You, about a Chicago woman who recalls her time as a young writer. It’s a tale Cisneros began in the early 1990s but could only finish during the past pandemic year.

“I could not write it when I was in my 30s,” Cisneros says. “I had to wait until I was older, because it’s really about a long view of a woman looking back.”

And now, at 66, Cisneros has much to consider.

“Every conversation about Chicago literature begins and ends with Sandra Cisneros,” says Seaman, a Booklist editor who has known the author for more than 30 years and who interviewed her this spring at a ceremony where she was presented with a lifetime achievement award from the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. Cisneros has a perspective “that in the original Chicago literary canon was not represented at all,” Seaman says. “She was really a new kind of radical voice when she first started.

“She’s kind of like a child of Studs Terkel, listening to the voices of people in the neighborhoods who are usually overlooked. She combines a profoundly artistic sensibility with a deeply socially conscious sense of responsibility.”

In the late 1980s, Carlos Cumpián, a poet and editor of March Abrazo Press, included Cisneros’s early work in the anthology Emergency Tacos.

“I think it’s staggeringly hard to be a pioneer,” Cumpián says. “She struck a nerve, and people wanted to hear from a Mexican American woman, a Chicago gal. She found her niche and was further empowered.

“Sandra realized how rare it is to find our literature. … Mexican Americans are a huge population, but rare to see on a national platform.”

Seaman recalls events where kids, parents, and grandparents all came to see Cisneros — “many people who themselves came from other places or were the children of immigrants. She really speaks to them. There’s just sort of an amazing connection beyond the normal enjoyment of a writer.”

Cisneros entered the literary canon in 1984 with her bestseller The House on Mango Street, which follows a 12-year-old girl growing up in a diverse, blue-collar neighborhood. The book — taught often in classrooms, banned in others — has been translated into several languages and was staged at Steppenwolf Theatre. A long-awaited TV version, set to be filmed in Chicago, is under way, and composer Derek Bermel is working on an opera adaptation.

But Cisneros calls Martita, which was just pubished in a bilingual edition, her favorite among all her writings: “I put a lot of work into it so it could be as perfect as a little jewel box.”

It began as a short story in the early 1990s, Cisneros says, but she couldn’t come up with an ending back then. “I didn’t want to abandon a good story. It was something I always treasured. I knew I would get to it when I could. You have to wait until there is some quiet in your life.”

Martita was in a “deep sleep” for 30 years, she says, before she returned to it four or five years ago. Then an excess of quiet arrived with the COVID-19 pandemic. “It was awful for most people, but it made me reassess my life, because otherwise I would’ve been out on the road.” She canceled speaking engagements so she could finally “stay still and finish this story,” she says. “I felt guilty that I could keep working and people were — and are — going through such trauma and loss and pain.”

The new work unfolds as its protagonist rereads a series of letters exchanged in her youth with two female friends, one from Buenos Aires and the other from northern Italy. Cisneros says the story “gathers the complexity” of her epic 2002 novel, Caramelo, and “the succinctness and simplicity” of The House on Mango Street.

Yet, Seaman warns, readers shouldn’t be misled by the “distilled concision.” “It’s easy to look at Sandra’s work and go, ‘Oh yeah, I get it,’ but you’re missing many dimensions. Her care with language, that observational passion she has where she just notices everything. She channels a lot into every word, as poets do.”

And while the novella is complex, Seaman adds, “her language is direct and ringing clear. It’s intense.”

But is it too direct? Cisneros says she wonders how readers here will react to the not-so-perfect portrayal of the city. “Even though it’s a picture that Chicagoans might not find flattering, I think it’s an honest portrayal.”

Her narrator, Corina, refers to Chicago as “the place I said I’d rather die than live.” It is a city inhabited by rich and poor, and not much in between. “I think it’s curious how the rich have more light and sky and lawn,” Corina says. She and her husband are fixing up a three-flat; they “got it cheap” because it’s near the expressway. “And at first you can’t sleep with all that whooshing noise, but after a while you get used to it.”

Cisneros says she learned from experience “the sounds of the buildings you can afford.”

“My uncle’s house was next to the expressway. We lived next to the train that stopped over at Hermosa Park, so our house shook with the trains,” she says. “It’s not a coincidence when you look at the city map of what communities get divided by expressways and trains. That’s true in most communities. They don’t put it in the nice, affluent neighborhoods.”

Ultimately, Cisneros says, she wanted to write about the women she met while traveling to “telescope a lot of women into three people.”

“Many of the women I know who were talented didn’t make it to become writers,” she says. “But they still have a beautiful life. … Sometimes you don’t reach your dream, but another dream reaches you.”

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Sandra Cisneros Takes an Honest Look at ChicagoLynette Smithon September 8, 2021 at 3:54 pm Read More »

Olivia Jade, Martin Kove, Matt James among lineup for ‘Dancing With the Stars’Bryan Alexander | USA TODAYon September 8, 2021 at 2:23 pm

“Dancing With the Stars” has its full ballroom of stars.

Social media influencer Olivia Jade, “Bachelor” Matt James, “The Talk” co-host Amanda Kloots, and WWE superstar Mike “The Miz” Mizanin have joined the cast of “Dancing With the Stars.”

The reality dance competition announced the complete line-up on “Good Morning America” Wednesday after revealing last month that U.S. star gymnast Sunisa Lee and YouTuber JoJo Siwa, both 18, will compete for the mirrorball trophy starting Sept. 20.

The full cast includes “Beverly Hills, 90210” alum Brian Austin Green, “I Know Who Killed Me” actress Kenya Moore, “Cobra Kai” actor Martin Kove, “Dirty Dancing” actress Melora Hardin, Brooklyn Nets basketball star Iman Shumpert, Spice Girls star Melanie C (aka Sporty Spice), country singer Jimmie Allen, TV personality Christine Chiu, and Peloton instructor/influencer Cody Rigsby.

Jade, 21, is the daughter of “Full House” star Lori Loughlin and fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli, who was at the center of the college admission bribery scandal of 2019. Both parents pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges and served prison time after paying bribes to get their two daughters (Jade and Isabella Giannulli), accepted into the University of Southern California as crew recruits.

Television personality and “The Bachelor” star Matt James attends the WWE SummerSlam after party at Delano Las Vegas at Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino on August 21, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Getty Images for WWE SummerSlam

James, 29, made history this year as the ABC franchise’s first Black “Bachelor.” Former “Bachelorette” Kaitlyn Bristowe took home the mirrorball trophy in season 29. “Bachelorette” star Hannah Brown won the competition the season prior.

Pro dance partner pairings will be announced on the show’s opening night which will be hosted by executive producer Tyra Banks in her second season.

Siwa has already revealed that she will dance with a same-sex partner for the first time on the U.S. show.

“We’re making history,” Siwa, 18, who revealed her relationship with Kylie Prew this year. “My journey of coming out and having a girlfriend has inspired so many people around the world. I thought that if I chose to dance with a girl on this show, it would break the stereotypical thing.”

Show producers have revealed that judge Len Goodman will make a return in the new season. Last season, pandemic traveling restrictions kept the veteran Goodman in London.

Read more at usatoday.com

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Olivia Jade, Martin Kove, Matt James among lineup for ‘Dancing With the Stars’Bryan Alexander | USA TODAYon September 8, 2021 at 2:23 pm Read More »

‘Grandfluencers’ debunking aging myths via social mediaLEANNE ITALIE | AP Entertainment Writeron September 8, 2021 at 12:30 pm

NEW YORK — Joan MacDonald’s health was in shambles at age 71. She was overweight and on numerous medications with high cholesterol, rising blood pressure and kidney trouble.

Her daughter, a fitness coach, warned that she’d wind up an invalid if she didn’t turn things around. She did, hitting the gym for the first time and learning to balance her diet with the help of a brand new tool, an iPhone.

Now 75, MacDonald is a hype beast for health with a bodybuilder’s physique and 1.4 million loyal followers on Instagram.

She’s among a growing number of “grandfluencers,” folks 70 and up who have amassed substantial followings on social media with the help of decades-younger fans.

This photo shows Joan MacDonald, 75, in Tulum, Mexico, in 2020.AP

“It’s so rare to find someone her age being able to do all these things,” said one of her admirers, 18-year-old Marianne Zapata of Larchmont, New York. “It’s just such a positive thing to even think about.”

Both aspirational and inspirational, older influencers are turning their digital platforms into gold.

MacDonald has paid partnerships with the sportswear and supplement brand Women’s Best, and the stress-busting device Sensate. And she just launched her own health and fitness app not so many years after learning how to use digital technology herself.

On TikTok, four friends who go by @oldgays — the youngest is 65 — have 2.2 million followers, including Rihanna. They have an endorsement deal with Grindr as they delight fans with their clueless answers to pop culture questions.

Others focus on beauty and style, setting up Amazon closets with their go-to looks and putting on makeup tutorials live. Lagetta Wayne, at 78, has teens asking her to be their grandmother as she tends to her vegetables and cooks them up in Suisun City, California, as @msgrandmasgarden on TikTok.

This photo shows Lagetta Wayne, 78, in her garden in Suisun City, California, earlier this year. Via her TikTok videos, Wayne has teens asking her to be their grandmother as she tends to her vegetables and cooks them up.AP

Wayne, with 130,500 followers amassed since joining in June 2020, owes her social media success to a teenage granddaughter. Her very first video, a garden tour, clocked 37,600 likes.

“One day my garden was very pretty and I got all excited about that and I asked her if she would take some pictures of me,” Wayne recalled. “She said she was going to put me on TikTok and I said, well, what is TikTok? I had never heard of it.”

Most people ages 50 and up use technology to stay connected to friends and family, according to a 2019 survey by AARP. But less than half use social media daily for that purpose, relying on Facebook above other platforms.

Just 37% of those 70 and older used social media daily in 2019, the research showed. Since coronavirus struck, older creators have expanded their horizons beyond mainstay Facebook, often driven by the growing number of feeds by people their own age, said Alison Bryant, senior vice president for AARP.

This photo shows Jessay Martin, 68 (from left), Robert Reeves, 78, Michael Peterson, 65, and William Lyons, 77, in Cathedral City, California, in November 2020. The four friends, known as the Old Gays, are among a growing number of seniors making names for themselves on social media.AP

In the California desert town of Cathedral City, Jessay Martin is the second youngest of the Old Gays at 68.

“I thought I was going to spend the rest of my life relaxing pretty much, and I do, but this is picking up more for us. I had a very structured week where Monday I worked the food bank at the senior center, Tuesday and Friday I did yoga for an hour and a half, Wednesday I was on the front desk at the senior center. I was just sort of floating by, not being social, not putting myself out there in the gay community. And boy, has the Old Gays changed that,” Martin said.

Like MacDonald, they do a lot of myth busting about what’s possible in life’s sixth, seventh and eighth decades.

“They’re showing that anybody can do these things, that you don’t have to be afraid of aging. The 20 and 30 somethings don’t often think about that,” Bryant said. “The authenticity that we’re seeing in some of these older influencers is really refreshing. That’s part of the complexity of their narratives. They’re bringing other parts of their lives to it. They’re grandparents and great-grandparents and spouses. They’re more comfortable in their own skins.”

Sandra Sallin, a blogger and artist, has slowly built her following to 25,300 on Instagram. Her reach recently extended to the British Olympic gold-medal diver Tom Daley, who raved about her mother’s cheesecake recipe after his coach spotted it online and made it for her athletes and staff. Sallin, a lover of lipstick who focuses on cooking and beauty, also shares photos from her past and other adventures, like her turn last year in a vintage Spitfire high above the Cliffs of Dover.

At 69, Toby Bloomberg in Atlanta is a Sallin supporter. She discovered Sallin after watching her compete on the short-lived Food Network show “Clash of the Grandmas.”

“She talks a lot about aging. That’s quite an unusual phenomenon on social media, which is obviously dominated by people far younger than we are,” Bloomberg said.

Aging, in fact, is what drew Sallin to social media.

“I wanted to expand my world. I felt that I was older, that my world was shrinking. People were moving, people were ill,” she said. “So I started my blog because I wanted to reach out. After that, I heard about this thing called Instagram.

“I really stumbled my way in. I’m shocked because most people who follow me are 30 and 40 years younger. But there are people who are older, who have kind of given up and say, ‘You know, I’m going to start wearing lipstick.'”

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‘Grandfluencers’ debunking aging myths via social mediaLEANNE ITALIE | AP Entertainment Writeron September 8, 2021 at 12:30 pm Read More »

Chicago Bulls News: Why Stanley Johnson was a perfect signingRyan Heckmanon September 8, 2021 at 12:00 pm

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Chicago Bulls News: Why Stanley Johnson was a perfect signingRyan Heckmanon September 8, 2021 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears 2021 Season: Staff predictions, breakouts and moreAnish Puligillaon September 8, 2021 at 11:00 am

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Chicago Bears 2021 Season: Staff predictions, breakouts and moreAnish Puligillaon September 8, 2021 at 11:00 am Read More »

‘Small Engine Repair’: Sparks fly in a provocative drama not easily forgottenRichard Roeperon September 8, 2021 at 10:30 am

If “Small Engine Repair” comes across as a David Mamet-esque film based on a stage play, that’s because “Small Engine Repair” is a David Mamet-esque film based on a stage play — and in the hands of writer-director-star John Pollono, it’s a searing and raw and provocative viewing experience that might leave some viewers shaken due to the intense content but never comes across as exploitative. It’s a darkly funny, authentic and unforgettable piece of work.

‘Small Engine Repair’: 3.5 out of 4

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Pollono is best known for his roles on “Mob City” and “This Is Us,” but he’s also an accomplished playwright and screenwriter. He wrote and starred in the stage production of “Small Engine Repair” some 10 years ago, and the cinematic adaptation is finally here, with Pollono and the magnetic Jon Bernthal (“The Walking Dead,” “The Punisher”) reprising their roles, and terrific talents such as Shea Whigham (“Boardwalk Empire”) and Jordana Spiro (“Ozark”) and young actors Ciara Bravo and Spencer House rounding out the first-rate ensemble cast.

“Small Engine Repair” is about three lifelong friends in their 40s who talk tough, act tough and truly are tough — and often behave like idiots, especially after a long night (or day) of drinking. These guys might not know the definition of toxic masculinity, but they’ve skirted the edges of that world for most of their lives. Pollono is a dominant screen presence as Frank Romanoski, the most alpha of these three alpha males, who has done some prison time and is working hard to control his temper and would be the first to tell you he’s done basically one good thing in his life, and that’s raising his 18-year-old daughter Crystal (Bravo), who has the foul-mouthed swagger of her dad and her friends but is also a bright and lovely and sweet girl who will soon be going off to college. Bernthal’s macho lothario Terrance Swaino and Whigham’s undersized and relatively sensitive Packie Hanrahan have always been there for Crystal as well, while Crystal’s hard-partying mother Karen (Spiro) has been AWOL for most of Crystal’s life.

Writer-director Pollono has a keen ear for dialogue and a good eye for working-class visuals, and he has the confidence in his material to let “Small Engine Repair” slowly build to its ultimate destination. The first half of the film is all about establishing the relationship dynamic between Frank, Swaino and Packie, who alternate between clinking glasses and sharing stories and getting into disputes so heated they’ll stop talking to one another for months. When these guys go to a bar, you know there’s a 50/50 chance they’ll get into a scrap with some locals — or with each other. Meanwhile, Karen has decided she’s going to drop back into Crystal’s life and take her out for a night on the town, and let’s just say it doesn’t end with tender moments and reconciliation.

The dramatic stakes are raised considerably when Frank, Swaino and Packie get together at Frank’s repair shop for a night of beers, whiskey, steaks and bonding. Frank tells the boys he’s recently been playing pick-up basketball with a college kid named Chad (House), and Chad will be stopping by to drop off some drugs so they can kick the night into the next gear. Chad pulls up in a Mercedes Wagon which was paid for by his father, a wealthy and powerful attorney, and within minutes of his arrival we can see this guy is the prototypical “bro,” from his haircut and attire to his casually dismissive attitude to the story he tells about … well, we don’t want to give away anything about that story, other than to say it’s the first indication Chad hasn’t the faintest idea of why he’s really been invited to the repair shop.

Before the night is over, crimes will be committed and loyalties will be tested, and “Small Engine Repair” will dive into subject matter that is raw and rough and controversial. (At times even the characters acknowledge the horrific and debatable nature of their actions.) In less skilled hands, this could have come across as cynical and manipulative material, but Pollono is such a skilled wordsmith and the cast is so universally excellent, “Small Engine Repair” becomes a viewing experience you won’t easily shake off, not today and not for a long time.

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‘Small Engine Repair’: Sparks fly in a provocative drama not easily forgottenRichard Roeperon September 8, 2021 at 10:30 am Read More »

Horoscope for Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2021Georgia Nicolson September 8, 2021 at 5:01 am

Moon Alert

There are no restrictions to shopping or important decisions. The moon is in Libra.

Aries (March 21-April 19)

Today you might seek out someone older or more experienced to benefit from their advice. In fact, this is a very good day for warm conversations with others. Possibly, this person is a member of a group or a professional association? (We all need all the help we can get.)

Taurus (April 20-May 20)

You’re ready to work hard. In fact, you’re willing to put your comfort second to the duties and obligations that you have. Obviously, this means you will accomplish a lot today. Fortunately, coworkers will help you. You will likely be very hands-on in whatever you do.

Gemini (May 21-June 20)

This is a good day to teach children or young minds. It’s also a good day to hone a skill or practice something so that you get better and better — perhaps in the arts or perhaps in sports. You’re also willing to do the necessary leg work in making plans for future socializing or vacations.

Cancer (June 21-July 22)

This will be a practical day for you because you’re ready to be sort of tough and do whatever is necessary to get the job done. Quite likely, an important discussion with an older family relative (perhaps a parent) will take place. Of course, you’re interested in redecorating and doing home repairs.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)

Today you are in a serious but commonsense frame of mind, which means discussions with others will be about practical matters. You might want to teach something important to someone? You will also be willing to study something with focus and application.

Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

When it comes to financial matters today, you will be conservative, and play it safe. For example, if shopping, you will want to buy long-lasting, practical items. You will also be thrifty with your money. You won’t waste it. In fact, this is the perfect time to set up a budget.

Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

Today the moon is in your sign dancing with stern Saturn, which makes you more sober and realistic about everything in your world. However, it also toughens you up and lets you deal patiently with considerable adversity and strain. This is why you’ll get a lot done today.

Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

This is an excellent day to do research behind the scenes or do anything that allows you to seek out solutions to old problems or answers to old questions. You will be persevering about going after what you want to learn. You won’t give up.

Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

Today you will feel less inclined to talk about your feelings. In fact, you might choose to go off by yourself to evaluate and ponder something. However, someone older might offer you emotional support or give you practical suggestions. (Nice.)

Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

When dealing with bosses and authority figures today (including parents and the police) you want commonsense answers and a practical approach to things. You’re not interested in fancy psychobabble or tricky talk. You want a doable solution.

Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

This is an excellent day to study because you want practical results for your efforts. You want to learn something new, and especially, you want to learn something that will be useful for you. History or anything in the past will also have a strong attraction for you.

Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)

This is an excellent day to take care of loose details with banking, taxes, shared property, insurance issues and inheritances. Your mind is focused; furthermore, you have the perseverance and the right headspace to tackle these issues.

If Your Birthday Is Today

Actor Martin Freeman (1971) shares your birthday. You are confident and level-headed. People admire you because you are trustworthy, loyal, hard-working and reliable. (Ironically, you are a busy thinker who resists routine.) This year you will build solid foundations in your life both physically as well as intangible structures. This is also a good year to be aware of your health and take care of it.

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Horoscope for Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2021Georgia Nicolson September 8, 2021 at 5:01 am Read More »

When told more evidence was needed, CPD detective wanted prosecutors to reject charges against suspect in slaying of 7-year-old girl: prosecution memoMatthew Hendricksonon September 8, 2021 at 2:57 am

Cook County prosecutors contend a Chicago police detective asked them to reject charges against a suspect in the slaying of a 7-year-old girl when they indicated more evidence was needed in the high-profile case because the detective said he “had not seen his family and was tired and was not willing to do any more work on the case,” according to a prosecution memo obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times.

Once the charges were rejected, at least one high-ranking CPD official, in an unusual move, suggested police would circumvent prosecutors and have the suspect charged directly. Police approached a judge to get additional time to do that without prosecutors’ knowledge, according to the memo and sources familiar with the matter.

The dispute and the memo illustrate the ongoing tensions between Chicago police and the Cook County state’s attorney’s office. Detectives privately complain prosecutors make unreasonable demands in terms of evidence needed in cases, more than they’ve been ever asked before under previous top prosecutors. Prosecutors, however, contend they are simply requesting evidence needed to meet the high burden of proof.

In early discussions about the slaying of the 7-year-old, Serenity Broughton, prosecutors wanted police to bring in a witness for an additional interview and asked police to hold off on the arrest of a potential suspect as the investigation continued, according to the memo.

But an arrest was made anyway, and detectives went to prosecutors to approve charges.

Prosecutors offered to let police further investigate rather than reject the charges.

However, the detective, who didn’t think a witness could be located, declined that offer, saying he wanted prosecutors to reject charges and he “did not wish to do any more work on the case,” the memo said.

Serenity was killed and her 6-year-old sister, Aubrey Broughton, wounded when shots were fired at a car they were in with their mother in the 6200 block of West Grand Avenue on Aug. 15.

The suspect was sitting in a car that two people were seen running back to after shots were fired that afternoon in Belmont Cragin, but there was no evidence they had been involved in the crime and none of the individuals were seen with weapons, the memo said.

A state’s attorney’s office spokeswoman Monday said charges were rejected because there was insufficient evidence and added, “police agreed with this decision.”

The Sun-Times is not naming the suspect because he hasn’t been charged.

The man was on parole for a 2018 attempted armed robbery conviction but has been released from CPD custody, according to a spokeswoman for the Illinois Department of Corrections.

Chicago police Cmdr. Eric WinstromLinkedIn

Police official asks for ‘favor,’ cites department ‘morale problems’

After the charges were rejected, CPD Cmdr. Eric Winstrom called a prosecutor and asked her “do him a favor and charge the case” because his “team had bad morale problems and [he] will not be able to keep his team together with the rejections that have happened,” the memo said.

Prosecutors again offered to classify the case as a continuing investigation, but Winstrom also rejected that option, saying he would pursue a felony override, the memo said.

Police have a limited amount of time after an arrest before the suspect is charged by prosecutors. Felony override allows police to bypass the state’s attorney’s office and charge a suspect with a felony, but the override is only supposed to be used after police have exhausted all other options of working with prosecutors.

If police did file the charges in Serenity’s murder last week — which apparently never happened — prosecutors had planned to drop the case against the suspect if he appeared at a bond hearing, a prosecution source said.

The memo said Chief of Detectives Brendan Deenihan Friday also talked with a prosecutor who told Deenihan “what is happening with Area 5 is outrageous and needs to be immediately addressed,” apparently referring to detectives not being willing to continue to investigate cases that prosecutors say don’t meet their burden of proof.

Later Friday, police officials attempted to seek a judge’s order, that if approved, would allow police to hold the suspect longer without charging him and give them time to pursue a felony override, a source said.

Officials with Chief Judge Timothy C. Evans’ office weren’t able to provide additional information Tuesday.

A police spokesman declined to comment on the matter, only saying the murder investigation is ongoing.

“The Chicago Police Department is committed to holding those responsible for the murder of 7-year-old Serenity Broughton, and the wounding of her 6-year-old sister Aubrey, accountable,” the police spokesman said in a statement. “We are working closely on this investigation with the Cook County State’s Attorney to bring forward justice for Serenity, Aubrey, and their family.”

Political pressure to charge heats up

This isn’t the first time Area 5 detectives have had a disagreement over charging suspects with prosecutors from State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s office.

In August, prosecutors refused to charge a suspect in the killing of Chrys Carvajal, a 19-year-old Illinois National Guard soldier shot to death about 1:30 a.m. on July 3 in the 2200 block of North Lockwood Avenue, also in Belmont Cragin.

Police said they identified the vehicle used in the shooting and obtained data putting the suspect’s cellphone in the area of the shooting. The 38-year-old man, a Milwaukee Kings gang member, jumped out of the car and randomly shot Carvajal, police said.

Prosecutors said they rejected filing charges in that case as well because of insufficient evidence.

Police had “the wrong person” identified in that case, according to the memo, which did not include additional information.

Chris Garibay, senior vice commander of American Legion Post 939, speaks during a protest Aug. 13 demanding justice for murder victim Chrys Carvajal.Pat Nabong / Sun-Times file

In both killings, Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th) denounced prosecutors’ decisions not to file charges.

“What else do you want? You’re not going to have the person who committed the crime say ‘I did it,'” he said last month of the Carvajal case.

And on Saturday, Villegas tweeted: “This is the 2nd murder case where my community comes forward to provide witnesses and the 2nd time the murderer is released back into the community. Why the hell should they come forward to help if all there [sic] doing is putting themselves at risk now.”

Ald. Ray Lopez (15th) has also been critical of the decision to not approve charges in the cases. In an interview with Fox News, Lopez called the decision to not bring charges “mind-boggling” and “a message telling Chicagoans that … political leadership is not there to hold criminals accountable.”

In a statement Tuesday, Foxx said her office has “an ethical obligation to review the facts, evidence, and law in each case and only bring charges when there is sufficient evidence to support a charge.

“As Cook County State Attorney, and as a mother, I am committed to ensuring justice and accountability on behalf of victims of violent crime, especially children . . . We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners as we work towards justice on behalf of the People of Cook County,” Foxx said.

Contributing: Frank Main, Tom Schuba

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When told more evidence was needed, CPD detective wanted prosecutors to reject charges against suspect in slaying of 7-year-old girl: prosecution memoMatthew Hendricksonon September 8, 2021 at 2:57 am Read More »

It’s kind of freaky how runaway White Sox have yet to get streakySteve Greenbergon September 8, 2021 at 12:52 am

At least three things have been missing from this very good — but not always great — White Sox season.

One: competition in the division. The Indians have been treading water since June. The Tigers and Royals are on the upswing, if “on the upswing” can be defined as no longer being out of games before the end of batting practice. The Twins? Somebody probably should’ve stuck a mirror under their noses months ago.

“Why do you think we haven’t been pushed?” manager Tony La Russa asked a questioner. “We’ve been pushing ourselves.”

Two: a full deck. Due to injuries serious and less so — and all over the roster — the Sox haven’t gotten to play with one yet.

And the third thing missing: winning streaks. What does this Sox team look like when it’s clicking on all cylinders? It’s a trick question because we haven’t seen it. To put that another way: The ragtag Cubs entered Tuesday on a seven-game winning streak — longer than any the Sox have put together in 2021.

Not since the Giants in 2014 has the eventual World Series winner rolled into the playoffs without at least one streak of seven or more wins on its resume. A quirky thing about those dynastic Giants: They didn’t have a single seven-game winning streak when they won it all in 2012 or 2010, either. But every champ since the Giants’ run ended has been streakier — in a good way — than these Sox so far.

Even in a 60-game season last year, the Dodgers crossed the “seven” threshold. (The Sox did, too.) The 2019 Nationals ripped off eight straight to end the regular season, absolutely roaring in. The 2018 Red Sox had nine- and eight-game streaks as part of a blistering 17-2 start. The 2017 Astros and 2016 Cubs went big with 11-gamers (and separate seven-gamers). And the 2015 Royals wasted no time, starting the season 7-0.

What does it all mean? Perhaps nothing bad as far as the Sox postseason hopes are concerned.

“Consistency is the thing that you strive for,” La Russa said, “and we’ve had a consistent mindset.”

Then again, in 2005 the Sox had one seven-game winning streak and — count ’em — three others that were even longer than that. Now that was a team that could get red-hot. This year’s team hasn’t managed that yet. One would like to believe a higher Sox gear actually exists.

JUST SAYIN’

What happened to the Cubs being left for dead, anyway?

There’s no stopping this Schwindel fella.Photo by Nuccio DiNuzzo/Getty Images

Frank Schwindel happened. A 29-year-old rookie with a vacuum cleaner salesman’s name, a big bopper’s game and, yes, even some growing fame happened. Cubs fans are stopping him on the street these days, and it’s no wonder. You can’t spell Schwindel without the “W-I-N.” And to think, the last time I typed that line, I was being a real smart-aleck.

In his first 33 games (123 at-bats) since joining the Cubs at the trade deadline, Schwindel has put up cartoonishly good offensive numbers: 10 homers, 30 RBI and a slash line of .374/.421/.699. By the way, that’s six homers and eight RBI shy of what Kris Bryant, Javy Baez and Anthony Rizzo combined for post-deadline in their first 80 games with their new teams.

“Ridiculous,” acting manager Andy Green said.

“He’s ‘Frank the Tank,’ ” teammate Matt Duffy said.

“It’s the most fun I’ve ever had,” Schwindel said.

Schwindel’s tear is arguably right there with Bryant’s gigantic August in 2016, when he ran away with the NL MVP race. In 27 games that month — the best one of his career — Bryant had 10 homers, 22 RBI and a slash line of .383/.472/.748.

Rizzo’s best month came in 2016, too: eight homers, 21 RBI and a slash line of .378/.467/.744. And the best 123-at-bat stretch of Baez’s career — his monster start in 2018, when he was MVP runner-up — produced 10 homers, 32 RBI and a slash line of .285/.325/.650.

All of which is to say: Schwindel is every bit as good as those guys.

No, not really.

But he’s a hell of a story.

o Is this the year I finally relent and play fantasy football?

Good God, no.

If I want to fantasize about football, I’ll imagine Northwestern didn’t get run over by Michigan State, Illinois didn’t spoof itself by losing to UTSA and Wisconsin, my alma mater, didn’t gag away its opener against Penn State.

o Did you catch what Bears coach Matt Nagy said about how he’ll handle the Andy Dalton-or-Justin Fields decisions going forward?

“If you just keep it super simple and don’t overthink it, [then] it will take care of itself.”

Translation: “Has anybody seen my Magic 8-Ball?”

o You know you’re dying to know.

Rams 23, Bears 16.

Fields starts in Week 3. Bears win seven. See you next year.

And print it.

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It’s kind of freaky how runaway White Sox have yet to get streakySteve Greenbergon September 8, 2021 at 12:52 am Read More »