Videos

Feds want nearly 10 years for Galesburg man who joined Minneapolis rioting before heading to ChicagoJon Seidelon July 23, 2021 at 5:46 pm

Federal prosecutors in Minnesota are asking a judge to punish a man from downstate Galesburg with nearly a decade in prison for burning down a Sprint store amid last year’s rioting in Minneapolis before turning his sights on Chicago.

Matthew Lee Rupert, 29, “drove over 400 miles to exploit an aggrieved community for fun” and “packed a duffle bag full of artillery-shell fireworks, but apparently forgot his signs protesting the death of George Floyd,” prosecutors wrote in a court filing seeking the harsh sentence Thursday.

The fireworks that prosecutors say Matthew Rupert brought with him to riot in Minneapolis.
U.S. District Court records

Rupert then moved on from Minneapolis to Chicago as rioting and looting began to break out here May 30, 2020. He did so even though someone warned him on Facebook that in Chicago, “they just dont pull out guns .they use them .” But Rupert was soon arrested after violating the curfew Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced in response to the unrest.

Jordan Kushner, Rupert’s defense attorney, told the Chicago Sun-Times by email he expected to file his own position paper on Rupert’s potential sentence by the end of the day Friday. Rupert’s sentencing is set for Aug. 10.

Meanwhile, the first federal court sentencing in Chicago to directly address the violence here took place last week, when U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman gave three years of probation to Jacob Fagundo for setting fire to a Chicago police vehicle.

Rupert pleaded guilty to arson in April, admitting he posted a roughly two-hour video to Facebook Live on May 29, 2020, in which he could be seen encouraging violence against law enforcement, damaging property, breaking into buildings and looting businesses in Minneapolis. His plea agreement says he can be heard on the video declaring, “We came to riot!”

Eventually, Rupert can also be seen asking for lighter fluid and entering a boarded-up Sprint Store, according to the plea deal. It said he entered a back room of the store, knocked boxes into a pile on the ground and sprayed them with lighter fluid. A juvenile Rupert brought along with him from Galesburg then lit the pile on fire at Rupert’s direction, according to the document.

The resulting fire totaled the store, according to the feds. Liberty Mutual, which insured the property, has so far paid nearly $4 million to repair the building and replace lost rental income, and Sprint lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in inventory, they said. The store is still closed.

Meanwhile, prosecutors say Rupert has a lengthy history getting into trouble and taunting law enforcement. Even though he has been locked up, they also said Rupert has been caught with alcohol, got in a fight and threatened inmates and correctional officers.

Finally, they said the severe sentence would also send an important message.

“While nobody hopes for widespread civil disorders in the future, the likelihood of such events remains a distinct possibility as the country grapples with this period of societal change,” they wrote.

Read More

Feds want nearly 10 years for Galesburg man who joined Minneapolis rioting before heading to ChicagoJon Seidelon July 23, 2021 at 5:46 pm Read More »

NBA, Olympic basketball not exactly the same gameTim Reynolds | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 4:47 pm

TOKYO — The U.S. men’s basketball team was about to start playing its final warm-up for the Tokyo Olympics a few days ago in Las Vegas, and Spain’s Ricky Rubio found himself in a pregame conversation with American guard Zach LaVine.

Rubio has well over a decade of experience in the international game. LaVine has a few weeks.

“This is different,” LaVine told Rubio.

Rubio nodded. LaVine wasn’t wrong.

The rims are 10 feet high and much of the court looks the same as what American NBA players are used to, but the nuances of the international game — the Olympic game — are much different. Quarters are 10 minutes long instead of 12, games move more quickly with fewer time-outs, the 3-point line is closer, the level of physicality is higher and much of what happens on defense under FIBA rules simply doesn’t fly in the NBA.

“I mean, it’s basketball, but it’s a little different,” Rubio said. “That being said, it’s not just the rules, it’s the role they have on the team as well. Maybe you have one or two shots in the first quarter when you usually have like five or six in the first five minutes of the game, and you have to be ready for that. There’s a lot of handchecks; it’s called different in NBA than in FIBA. There is a lot of physicality. I will say, it’s played different.”

And as U.S. coach Gregg Popovich has pointed out many times — first when he coached the Americans in the Basketball World Cup two years ago and now in the lead-up to the Tokyo Games — that many of the teams in the Olympics have been together before and have a familiarity with the different rules.

He’s been preaching about it often with this group, particularly the element of a 40-minute game versus the NBA’s 48-minute variety.

“You can’t have a bad quarter,” Popovich said. “In the NBA, you can do that. But those last eight minutes are really important. Sometimes, that’s where talent takes over, in the last eight minutes. But in a 40-minute game there are many fewer possessions. Your turnovers become more important. … In a sense, it’s more of an NCAA one-and-done thing than it is being in an NBA playoff and you might have a second game poor but you can come back the third game and the fourth game and so on and so forth.

“It’s a matter of extreme focus, expecting nothing, asking for nothing, and being very, very serious from the get-go.”

Perhaps out of habit, some players on the U.S. team argued for a goaltending call against Nigeria’s Chimezie Metu in the Americans’ first exhibition game in Las Vegas. Kevin Durant was taking a free throw for the U.S., and as his second shot bounced on the rim Metu reached up and knocked it away. That’s goaltending in the NBA, but legal under FIBA rules.

And U.S. forward Keldon Johnson seemed a bit surprised when he picked up his fifth foul in the game against Spain and got told he had fouled out. In the NBA, the sixth foul sends someone to the bench for the rest of the evening; in FIBA, it only takes five.

“As the game goes on, as we continue to go through this process, we’re figuring out the difference between the international game and the game we play,” U.S. guard Damian Lillard said. “There’s been moments where we’re all looking around saying ‘what’s going on?’ We’re learning on the fly.”

Zone defense is a big part of the international game; NBA teams play zone as well, but with the twist that the defensive 3-second rule still applies. That rule isn’t in the FIBA book, so teams can pack the paint for the entirety of a defensive possession if so inclined.

There are other little differences as well, such as how backcourt fouls are whistled and what constitutes a travel.

“Everybody is learning,” Nigeria coach Mike Brown said. “Including me.”

What the Americans are learning is that Rubio was right. The game is the same — just very different.

“I think the different rules are going to be an adjustment,” U.S. forward Jerami Grant said. “But that’s what we’re here working on right now. We’ve got a great group of guys, certainly a talented group of guys and we’re learning pretty fast.”

Read More

NBA, Olympic basketball not exactly the same gameTim Reynolds | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 4:47 pm Read More »

Tokyo Olympics begin with muted ceremony and empty stadiumFoster Klug | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 3:38 pm

TOKYO — Belated and beleaguered, the virus-delayed Tokyo Summer Olympics finally opened Friday night with cascading fireworks and made-for-TV choreography that unfolded in a near-empty stadium, a colorful but strangely subdued ceremony that set a striking tone to match a unique pandemic Games.

As their opening played out, devoid of the usual crowd energy, the Olympics convened amid simmering anger and disbelief in much of the host country, but with hopes from organizers that the excitement of the sports to follow would offset the widespread opposition.

“Today is a moment of hope. Yes, it is very different from what all of us had imagined,” IOC President Thomas Bach said. “But let us cherish this moment because finally we are all here together.”

“This feeling of togetherness — this is the light at the end of the dark tunnel of the pandemic,” Bach declared. Later, Japanese tennis star Naomi Osaka received the Olympic flame from a torch relay through the stadium and lit the Olympic cauldron.

Trepidations throughout Japan have threatened for months to drown out the usual packaged glitz of the opening. Inside the stadium after dusk Friday, however, a precisely calibrated ceremony sought to portray that the Games — and their spirit — are going on.

Early in the ceremony, an ethereal blue light bathed the empty seats as loud music muted the shouts of scattered protesters outside calling for the Games to be canceled. A single stage held an octagon shape meant to resemble the country’s fabled Mount Fuji. Later, an orchestral medley of songs from iconic Japanese video games served as the soundtrack for athletes’ entrances.

Mostly masked athletes waved enthusiastically to thousands of empty seats and to a world hungry to watch them compete but surely wondering what to make of it all. Some athletes marched socially distanced, while others clustered in ways utterly contrary to organizers’ hopes. The Czech Republic entered with other countries even though its delegation has had several positive COVID tests since arriving.

“You had to face great challenges on your Olympic journey,” Bach told the athletes. “Today you are making your Olympic dream come true.”

Organizers held a moment of silence for those who had died in the pandemic; as it ticked off and the music paused, the sounds of the protests echoed in the distance.

Protesters’ shouts gave voice to a fundamental question about these Games as Japan, and large parts of the world, reel from the continuing gut punch of a pandemic that is stretching well into its second year, with cases in Tokyo approaching record highs this week: Will the deep, intrinsic human attachment to the spectacle of sporting competition at the highest possible level be enough to salvage these Olympics?

Time and again, previous opening ceremonies have pulled off something that approaches magic. Scandals — bribery in Salt Lake City, censorship and pollution in Beijing, doping in Sochi — fade into the background when the sports begin.

But with people still falling ill and dying each day from the coronavirus, there’s a particular urgency to the questions about whether the Olympic flame can burn away the fear or provide a measure of catharsis — and even awe — after a year of suffering and uncertainty in Japan and around the world.

“Today, with the world facing great challenges, some are again questioning the power of sport and the value of the Olympic Games,” Seiko Hashimoto, president of the Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee, said in a speech. But, she said of the Games’ possibilities, “This is the power of sport. … This is its essence.”

Japanese Emperor Naruhito declared the Games open, with fireworks bursting over the stadium after he spoke.

Outside, hundreds of curious Tokyo residents lined a barricade that separated them from those entering — but just barely: Some of those going in took selfies with the onlookers across the barricades, and there was an excited carnival feeling. Some pedestrians waved enthusiastically to approaching Olympic buses.

The sports have already begun, and some of the focus is turning toward the competition to come.

Can the U.S. women’s soccer team, for instance, even after an early, shocking loss to Sweden, become the first to win an Olympics following a World Cup victory? Can Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama win gold in golf after becoming the first Japanese player to win the Masters? Will Italy’s Simona Quadarella challenge American standout Katie Ledecky in the 800- and 1,500-meter freestyle swimming races?

For now, however, it’s hard to miss how unusual these Games promise to be. The lovely national stadium can seem like an isolated militarized zone, surrounded by huge barricades. Roads around it have been sealed and businesses closed.

Inside, the feeling of sanitized, locked-down quarantine carries over. Fans, who would normally be screaming for their countries and mixing with people from around the world, have been banned, leaving only a carefully screened contingent of journalists, officials, athletes and participants.

Olympics often face opposition, but there’s also usually a pervasive feeling of national pride. Japan’s resentment centers on the belief that it was strong-armed into hosting — forced to pay billions and risk the health of a largely unvaccinated, deeply weary public — so the IOC can collect its billions in media revenue.

“Sometimes people ask why the Olympics exist, and there are at least two answers. One is they are a peerless global showcase of the human spirit as it pertains to sport, and the other is they are a peerless global showcase of the human spirit as it pertains to aristocrats getting luxurious hotel rooms and generous per diems,” Bruce Arthur, a sports columnist for the Toronto Star, wrote recently.

How did we get here? A quick review of the past year and a half seems operatic in its twists and turns.

A once-in-a-century pandemic forces the postponement of the 2020 version of the Games. A fusillade of scandals (sexism and other discrimination and bribery claims, overspending, ineptitude, bullying) unfolds. People in Japan, meanwhile, watch bewildered as an Olympics considered a bad idea by many scientists actually takes shape.

Japanese athletes, freed from onerous travel rules and able to train more normally, may enjoy a nice boost over their rivals in some cases, even without fans. Judo, a sport that Japan is traditionally a powerhouse in, will begin Saturday, giving the host nation a chance for early gold.

The reality, for now, is that the delta variant of the virus is still rising, straining the Japanese medical system in places, and raising fears of an avalanche of cases. Only a little over 20% of the population is fully vaccinated. And there have been near daily reports of positive virus cases within the so-called Olympic bubble that’s meant to separate the Olympic participants from the worried, skeptical Japanese population.

For a night, at least, the glamor and message of hope of the opening ceremonies may distract many global viewers from the surrounding anguish and anger.

“After more than half a century, the Olympic Games have returned to Tokyo,” Hashimoto said. “Now we will do everything in our power to make this Games a source of pride for generations to come.”

Read More

Tokyo Olympics begin with muted ceremony and empty stadiumFoster Klug | Associated Presson July 23, 2021 at 3:38 pm Read More »

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Hearn goes deep twice, Nwogu, Warkentin once as Pelicans bust out for 15 runs; Triantos signs; Miller, Avelino, Maldonado, and Artis stay hoton July 23, 2021 at 3:29 pm

Cubs Den

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Hearn goes deep twice, Nwogu, Warkentin once as Pelicans bust out for 15 runs; Triantos signs; Miller, Avelino, Maldonado, and Artis stay hot

Read More

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Hearn goes deep twice, Nwogu, Warkentin once as Pelicans bust out for 15 runs; Triantos signs; Miller, Avelino, Maldonado, and Artis stay hoton July 23, 2021 at 3:29 pm Read More »

Nekia Nichelle Reveals What It Was Like Being On The Dr. Phil Showon July 23, 2021 at 3:44 pm

Just N

Nekia Nichelle Reveals What It Was Like Being On The Dr. Phil Show

Read More

Nekia Nichelle Reveals What It Was Like Being On The Dr. Phil Showon July 23, 2021 at 3:44 pm Read More »

Cleveland’s baseball team announces name changeTom Withers | APon July 23, 2021 at 2:04 pm

CLEVELAND — Known as the Indians since 1915, Cleveland’s Major League Baseball team will be called Guardians.

The ballclub announced the name change Friday with a video on Twitter narrated by actor Tom Hanks, ending months of internal discussions triggered by a national reckoning by institutions and teams to permanently drop logos and names considered racist.

The choice of Guardians will undoubtedly be criticized by many of the club’s die-hard fans.

The organization spent most of the past year whittling down a list of potential names that was at nearly 1,200 just over a month ago. But the process quickly accelerated and the club landed on Guardians.

Team owner Paul Dolan said last summer’s social unrest, touched off by the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, spurred his intention to change the ballclub’s name.

In 2018, the Indians stopped wearing the contentious Chief Wahoo logo on their jerseys and caps. However, the team continues to sell merchandise bearing the smiling, red-faced caricature that was protested for decades by Native American groups.

Read More

Cleveland’s baseball team announces name changeTom Withers | APon July 23, 2021 at 2:04 pm Read More »

Can a Hawthorne ‘Racino’ Keep Horse Racing Alive in Chicago?Whet Moseron July 23, 2021 at 2:00 pm

My first day at Arlington Park was one of the most momentous of my life.

It was July 1, 1996. My father’s wife was in town for a conference, and he needed to kill an afternoon. He suggested the track.

Even before we walked inside, I was awed by Arlington. From Northwest Highway, the grandstand resembled a splendid resort hotel. Its roof, a cowl painted the green of ancient copper, floated above the summer trees. Outside the gate, a garden spelled out A-R-L-I-N-G-T-O-N in red begonias.

Inside, the very worst thing that can happen to a novice gambler happened to me: I won a lot of money. First I bet a fin on Flash Light, and a two-dollar exacta: Flash Light and A Sunny Delight. As the horses charged past my seat, Flash Light took the lead and hurtled down the stretch like a running back headed for the end zone. A Sunny Delight was right behind him. I won $48, and felt confident enough to attempt a trifecta. A beginning horseplayer picking a cold trifecta is like a guy who’s never held a dart shooting three straight bullseyes, but my horses ran 1-2-3, for a $100 score.

Just like that, a sport I had paid attention to once a year—Kentucky Derby Day—became the central focus of my life. I started going to the track or the State Street OTB (which has since been declassed to a Chick-Fil-A) every weekend. Then I started going every day, fantasizing about earning my living as a handicapper. I watched the race replays on TV every night. I clipped the results charts from the Sun-Times. I turned down a job promotion because it would have interfered with my gambling time.

A horseplayer is a guy who’ll bet $200 on a race, but won’t spend $20 on a pair of pants. For awhile, in my late 20s and early 30s, I was that guy. Eventually, I made the track pay. I wrote my first cover story for the Chicago Reader about my tutelage by a broken-down horseplayer at Sportsman’s Park. My first book, Horseplayers: Life at the Track, was about a year spent playing the horses. Getting hooked on gambling turned out to be great for my career.

Last Saturday, I spent what may be my last day at Arlington Park. The track is scheduled to close forever at the end of this meet. My press pass was labeled “2021 Race Season: The Final Turn.” Arlington’s owner, Churchill Downs, Inc., thinks placing a casino there—the only financially viable model for a modern racetrack—would compete with Rivers Casino in Des Plaines, in which it owns a majority stake. On this trip to Arlington, I won $15, by picking Bizzee Channel to win the Arlington Stakes.

I thought more, though, about what I and every other horseplayer in Chicago will be losing. Before the last race, I stood in the paddock and photographed the horses as the hotwalkers led them around the ring. The mellowing sun was declining over the Clubhouse Gate. A cool evening wind slid through the trees. Arlington is as serene as any public space in Chicagoland. It’s like the Botanic Gardens, with the bonus that you can win money.

When I first became a racetrack junkie, Chicago horseplayers followed four seasons: Sportsman’s, Arlington, Hawthorne and winter. After this year, it looks as though Hawthorne will be the last track standing. (Sportsman’s closed in 2002, after its owners made the disastrous decision to transform it into a combination horse racing/auto racing facility.) Hawthorne, on Cicero Avenue in Stickney, was the least glamorous of the three tracks, with a dank underground paddock and a minor league baseball-style grandstand overlooking the world’s largest sewage treatment plant. 

My first visit to Hawthorne was also unforgettable: standing on the poured concrete floor, on a Thursday afternoon, was the governor of Illinois, the Honorable Jim Edgar. Perfectly groomed and suited, the governor was clutching a race program and chatting with a broken-down horseplayer in a flannel shirt and baggy jeans. I knew why he was there: to watch his father-in-law’s horse, Lady Doc. I also knew that every time Edgar was at the track, Lady Doc won. I’d seen them together at Arlington. Coincidence? The governor’s presence was, as we say in handicapping, an angle. I bet on Lady Doc. She won.

Chicago has always been a second-tier racing circuit, not quite on the same level as New York, Florida, Kentucky or California. In recent years, though, as horse racing has lost market share to other forms of gambling, Chicago’s prestige has declined steeply. (In an era of increasing concern for animal welfare, horse racing is also becoming an atavism.) The Illinois Derby, which was once a Kentucky Derby prep—War Emblem won both races in 2002—has not been run at Hawthorne since 2017. The Arlington Million used to attract Europe’s fastest turf thoroughbreds; His Highness the Aga Khan entered a horse in the race. This year, the Million has been discounted to $600,000, and renamed the Mister D. Stakes, after Dick Duchossois, Arlington’s former owner.

Hawthorne, though, is promising to revive horse racing in Chicago. The track is spending $400 million to turn the grandstand into a racetrack/casino, with slots, table games and sports betting to supplement the horse racing—a racino, in the industry lingo. It’s scheduled to open by the end of 2022. I’ve been to racinos in Des Moines and Cleveland, and horse racing was a floor show. I had to walk through acres of slot machines to find the holdout horseplayers, leaning over the rail and handicapping short fields of cheap claimers. Hawthorne will be different, promises spokesman Dakota Shultz. 

“It often becomes, the casino is the main thing,” Shultz said. “Anybody walking into our facility is going to know there’s racing. It’s our identity. It’s going to be front and center, even right down to the design.”

With money from casino gambling, Hawthorne can also resume running lucrative stakes races, including the Illinois Derby, which in its prime offered a $750,000 purse and was heralded by a baritone belting out “My Kind of Town.”

“Perhaps even more than that,” Shultz said. “It can become a million-dollar race.”

However, a veteran handicapper I know, Scott McMannis, is skeptical that Chicago racing will return to its former glory from Hawthorne alone. A casino in industrial Stickney isn’t going to attract suburban families looking to spend a wholesome day at the races.

“They’ll be able to do the rudimentary things—use casino money to subsidize the product,” he said. “But the location and the drawing radius aren’t great. How much money is around the casino? And when you go there, you see all those smokestacks and those semi-trailers waiting to be hooked up.”

Guys like me will still play the horses at Hawthorne. Me and my bachelor horse racing buddies: Bob the Brain, David the Owl, Blonde Jimmy, Bias Bill, The Stat Man. We always liked betting Hawthorne better than Arlington, anyway. Hawthorne shipped in cheap horses from leaky-roof tracks all over the Midwest. That allowed them to run 12-horse races, which offer better odds for gamblers. I once hit a $1,240 exacta at Hawthorne—my biggest score ever. We’ll still be watching the races, but without Arlington, and with most of Hawthorne’s customers playing the slots, horse racing will become an ever-more marginal sport in Chicago.

Read More

Can a Hawthorne ‘Racino’ Keep Horse Racing Alive in Chicago?Whet Moseron July 23, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Blackhawks: 3 draft day trades to consider makingVincent Pariseon July 23, 2021 at 2:00 pm

Read More

Chicago Blackhawks: 3 draft day trades to consider makingVincent Pariseon July 23, 2021 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Christian theater company artist says he was forced out for being gayEvan F. Mooreon July 23, 2021 at 1:00 pm

During his 12 years working for Christian Youth Theater, Rockford man Andrew Mahan said he became an ally for students who didn’t always feel they fit in.

“I had countless students constantly sending me emails and messages saying: ‘Hey, I am gay, or I am trans or this or that. I always feel safe around you when I do shows. I always audition for shows because I know you’re on staff and I feel safer with you,'” said Mahan.

That ended in 2018 when, he said, CYT Chicago leaders gave him two options: resign or have his employment terminated.

From what Mahan was told, the parent of a student at CYT Rockford, a chapter of CYT Chicago, discovered a poster of a Rockford drag show that had his picture on it and notified a company area coordinator.

“One of the board members spoke to me and she said, ‘You know we are a Christian company and you know our standpoint on homosexuality, and the board is moving for your removal,’ ” said Mahan, a gay man. “I decided to bow out quietly.”

He said CYT Chicago drafted a statement to staff members saying he left the company for work opportunities in Chicago — a statement he flatly denies.

“They crafted a very beautiful lie as to why I was leaving the company,” Mahan said. “None of the staff that I’ve worked with closely for years who knew the actual reason spoke up — it was completely swept under the rug.”

CYT Chicago and Rockford officials did not return requests for comment.

Andrew Mahan (left) worked in various roles for two CYT chapters from 2007 to 2018.
Andrew Mahan

Mahan kept the reason for his departure secret until earlier this month, when went public in the wake of a new CYT Chicago policy toward LGBTQ+ students and staff, and hearing from former students he mentored.

A new contract from the Cary-based company aligned itself with “traditional beliefs of God, the Bible, sexuality, marriage, human identity and gender” and ordered, “Speech and behavior of students, parents and staff must comply with a biblical standard, at least while on site and for the duration of the CYT Chicago programs in which these families and students are participating.”

Mahon responded with a lengthy, passionate Facebook post criticizing the contract and breaking his silence about his exit.

“If a company is going to proclaim themselves Christian, which by definition means striving to be Christ-like, then love should be the first and foremost goal of the company in all things, period,” Mahan said in an interview. “And when I read the contract, the statement that they ended the contract with was ‘In his Sufficient Grace.’ I found it humorous and offensive that they would [use those words to] end a contract that is pretty blatantly unaccepting and a bit hateful toward groups and individuals.

“For a company that calls itself Christian to put that phrase after hate-mongering in a contract, I found that very, very, very telling of this company’s mentality. … I couldn’t stay quiet.”

Mahan worked for CYT Chicago and Rockford from 2007-2018, holding various roles for over 20 productions, including choreographer, costume designer, teacher, camp director, and — perhaps the most important job, he says — mentor.

Looking back at his time with CYT Chicago and Rockford, he says the theater company became less and less of a place for teens who don’t fit societal norms.

“When I joined the company it did not function as a ‘church’ theater company. It was not pushed on people the idea of faith and religion, or that you had to be a Christian,” said Mahan. “There was an unspoken unsettling tone when I started working there as an openly gay male. I knew I would have to be [careful] just because not all Christian and religious people are comfortable with the idea of homosexuality.

“During some of those staff meetings for camps or for shows, the conversation would turn to: ‘This student just came out.’ There was always that assumption of predatory behavior with those kinds of students and staff when it got out that a staff member was gay.”

These days, Mahan is running his own theater company in Rockford with his mother, Ellen, also a former CYT Chicago and Rockford employee, named Gateway Arts, which has the mission statement: “At Gateway, we see you. And we meet you where you are.”

“We’ve been going strong,” said Mahan, Gateway Arts’ artistic director. “After we both left, a lot of students left CYT and actually joined our theater company just because they didn’t feel accepted.”

Gateway Arts theater students perform “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.”
Gateway Arts

Read More

Christian theater company artist says he was forced out for being gayEvan F. Mooreon July 23, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Blackhawks Draft: 1 player is perfect for themVincent Pariseon July 23, 2021 at 1:00 pm

Read More

Chicago Blackhawks Draft: 1 player is perfect for themVincent Pariseon July 23, 2021 at 1:00 pm Read More »