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Illinois sports betting scores big in Super Bowl LVAndrew Sullenderon February 9, 2021 at 2:29 am

A man sits on a couch as betting odds for the Super Bowl are displayed on monitors at the Circa resort and casino sports book last week in Las Vegas.
A man sits on a couch as betting odds for the Super Bowl are displayed on monitors at the Circa resort and casino sports book last week in Las Vegas. | John Locher/AP file

The total handle was $45,610,513 — with $42,756,647 of those bets being made online, according to figures released Monday by the Illinois Gaming Board.  The state’s cut of that is $1,148,890 in tax revenue.

SPRINGFIELD — Taking their first chance to bet legally in Illinois on the Super Bowl and running with it, football fans laid down $46 million in wagers, an amount called “historically the largest amount ever in Illinois.”

The total handle was $45,610,513 — with $42,756,647 of those bets being made online, according to figures released Monday by the Illinois Gaming Board.

The state’s cut of that is $1,148,890 in tax revenue.

“That number, that 1.1 could go up,” said Joe Miller, the board’s policy director. “There’s still some outstanding wagers still out there. So yeah, though, these are all preliminary numbers, just raw from the sports books this morning.”

Miller said the big game was the biggest event since sports betting was legalized in 2019 and launched last year.

“I just don’t know that there was a comparable event since last March when the first sports betting started,” he said. “Maybe some European soccer or something, but I don’t even think that that comes close. I think this is historically the largest amount ever in Illinois, and it’s that way for other jurisdictions as well.”

Blackhawks announcer Eddie Olczyk makes Illinois’ first legal sportsbook wager at BetRivers Sportsbook in Rivers Casino in Des Plaines last March.
Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times file
Blackhawks announcer Eddie Olczyk makes Illinois’ first legal sportsbook wager and puts $100 down on his hometown White Sox to win the American League pennant at 16-to-1 odds at BetRivers Sportsbook in Rivers Casino in Des Plaines last March.

The money bet on this one event is “nearly 20% to a quarter” of the total amount of all bets made in November, the last month for the state has data.

But others don’t think that the fallout from gambling is worth the payday for the state.

“That’s a lot of money to lose,” said Anita Bedell, executive director of Illinois Church Action on Alcohol and Addiction Problems. “And the state does not get much money, they only get 15%. So, when you consider the amount of harm to individuals and families, that’s a losing proposition.”

Bedell contends that gambling addiction has risen throughout the state following legalization of sports betting.

“There’s an increase of people who are calling the gambling hotline. There are people seeking out gamblers anonymous meetings,” she said. “There’s gonna be a lot of regrets with a lot of people losing so much money.”

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Illinois sports betting scores big in Super Bowl LVAndrew Sullenderon February 9, 2021 at 2:29 am Read More »

These Chicago Bungalow Planters Are to Die Foron February 8, 2021 at 8:56 pm

For years, Katie Lauffenberger and her husband Phil Thompson have combined their love of Chicago architecture (and public transit) with his intricate illustrations to produce typographies of the city’s built environment. You might have gotten to know them as Cape Horn Illustration, but they’ve rechristened their business as Wonder City Studio, in part to reflect a recent addition to their offerings: Lauffenberger’s ceramics.

Trained as a stop-motion animator, Lauffenberger (@katie_lauffenberger on Instagram) found her work turning increasingly digital, so she picked up a handmade hobby. That’s turned into a new line for Wonder City (@wonder_city_studio): ceramic planters in the form of bungalows and workers’ cottages, like three-dimensional forms of her husband’s illustrations. Each one is crafted over weeks, with multiple firings, days of painting, and a long, long drying period. I spoke with Lauffenberger about how her creations came to be.

How long have you lived in Chicago?
Since 2005. I came here for graduate school at the School of the Art Institute and never left. My background is actually in animation. So in undergrad I was in a program called Art and Technology and SAIC happened to have the same program. My focus was stop motion animation; I think the sculptural aspect of it really has carried over to what I’m doing now, because I really loved making the sets and the puppets and that kind of thing.

When you came to Chicago did you have a lot of interest in architecture at that point?
My interest in architecture really evolved as I got to know my now-husband, because he also moved to Chicago in 2005; he was doing a grad program at University of Chicago. And I cannot tell you how many memories I have of him and I wandering around different neighborhoods, in awe of the architecture here, and specifically the homes. You just don’t see homes like this elsewhere. And we really had never seen anything like that.

How did Wonder City come to be?
Wonder City is a kind of new incarnation of a business that we’ve had for 10 years. We used to be called Cape Horn illustration. And that business was really centered around Phil’s illustration work, and it tied together a lot of our interests in drawing, architecture, history, maps, relating to Chicago. But recently, we started feeling like that name wasn’t aligned with where we wanted to go with our mission, especially with the ceramics now that I’m starting to become more a part of the business

Wonder City is a lesser known nickname for Chicago, tied to the World’s Fair. There’s actually a book called The Wonder City that was published around that time that chronicles a lot of really interesting inventions that Chicago is known for, and we came across that and felt like it encapsulated our sense of wonderment of the city, and the never-ending inspiration that we find in it.

So the ceramics work is quite new?
I’ve worked in more of a digital capacity in my career for quite a while doing animation, and doing web-web type stuff. It got to a point five or so years ago where I just missed working with my hands. That’s what I’ve been doing since I was a kid, and did a lot at school, and then I felt like it would be almost a practical decision to go more the digital route, because I thought I would have a better chance of actually having a job that would pay my bills. And I did enjoy it, I transitioned my stop-motion animation background into a digital animation skill set. But I just really started to miss working with my hands, and I was looking for an outlet for that. And I started taking ceramics classes at Lillstreet Art Center.

I started off doing more figurative work, some busts and things like that, and then it clicked: We both share this love of architecture, why don’t I make some architectural work? It really is well suited for the style of ceramics that I make. I don’t throw on a wheel, I am a hand builder. My work is primarily what you call slab building, where I roll out slabs of clay — usually around a quarter of an inch thick — and then assemble different things out of those slabs. Architecture is perfect for that, because it’s walls and facades.

What are the challenges of sculpting a bungalow or cottage?
I have to take into account that clay shrinks throughout the process. So when I show a client the prototype, I know in the back of my mind I need to scale everything up probably about 10 percent.

The cottages, if I can control the detail — and I’m not doing porches or anything complex like that — take about six weeks from start to finish. They take a while to dry. If you rush that stage, you introduce the risk of cracks and warping, and that can ruin a piece. You need to let them dry for about two weeks.

After doing several of these, I’ve learned that the surface-treatment stage, like applying the color, takes almost longer than the sculpture. It can probably take me four to five days to sculpt one, but then it can take me a week to two to paint them.

And then the firings take some time. The first fire, when the clay becomes ceramic, takes about 48 hours because the kiln fires for 10 to 11 hours. And then I can’t open it until the kiln cools to 250 degrees. So it’s a two-day firing, and then there’s the glaze firing, when the clay becomes mature and most durable — that’s another two days right there. 

There’s usually some finishing at the end where I sand and make it really ready for shipping. The bungalows probably take a little bit longer because they’re usually more detailed. And then if you get into something like the Roscoe Village cottage, that was about two months, because there was just so much additional complexity.

What about the bungalow do you think makes it such a successful form?
This applies to a lot of homes in Chicago: They have a really interesting facade, and then there will be the Chicago common brick on the back. I love the fact that you have more modest sidewalls and back with an intricate facade, and I think that is something that carries through really well to the sculpture. The bungalow in particular, the fact that it’s a one and a half-story house, the shape of it works really well as a planter because I can open up the top. And the fact that a home like this would be in a setting with trees and plants around it is a nice tie-in.

Get your planter here.

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These Chicago Bungalow Planters Are to Die Foron February 8, 2021 at 8:56 pm Read More »

When is it time to replace hearing aids?on February 8, 2021 at 9:01 pm

Say What?

When is it time to replace hearing aids?

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Release Radar 2/5/21 – DD Walker vs Atmosphereon February 8, 2021 at 9:10 pm

Cut Out Kid

Release Radar 2/5/21 – DD Walker vs Atmosphere

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Woman dies in Gresham fireDavid Struetton February 8, 2021 at 7:53 pm

Crews respond to a blaze Feb. 8 at 8032 S. Hermitage Ave.
Crews respond to a blaze Feb. 8 at 8032 S. Hermitage Ave. | Chicago Fire Department

She was pulled from a rear bedroom at 8032 S. Hermitage Ave.

A woman died after a fire broke out at a Gresham home Monday morning on the South Side and spread to two neighboring houses.

The woman, about 45 years old, was pulled from a rear bedroom immediately after firefighters arrived at 8032 S. Hermitage Ave., according to the Chicago Fire Department.

She was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in critical condition and later pronounced dead, department spokesman Larry Langford said. She suffered smoke inhalation and severe burns.

The fire, which broke about about 10 a.m. and was put out within an hour, had spread to two other homes.

A home to the north had extensive damage to its roof and attic, Langford said. Four people and a dog in the house escaped safely. A home to the south sustained some exterior damage as well.

The home where the fire started did not have a smoke detector, Langford said. The cause of the fire wasn’t immediately clear.

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Woman dies in Gresham fireDavid Struetton February 8, 2021 at 7:53 pm Read More »

Woman dies in Gresham fireon February 8, 2021 at 7:10 pm

A woman died after a fire broke out at a Gresham home Monday morning on the South Side.

The woman, about 45 years old, was pulled from a rear bedroom at 8032 S. Hermitage Ave., according to the Chicago Fire Department.

She was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in critical condition and later pronounced dead, department spokesman Larry Langford said. She suffered smoke inhalation and severe burns.

The fire, which was extinguished by 10:45 a.m., had spread to at least one other home, Langford said.

Four adults were displaced by the blaze. It was unclear if there was a working smoke detector.

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Woman dies in Gresham fireon February 8, 2021 at 7:10 pm Read More »

The Best Fireplace in Metro Chicagoon February 8, 2021 at 7:02 pm

If you had visited 311 Sixth Avenue in La Grange in your carriage after it was first constructed in the 20th-century aughts, your horses would have trotted you up to the guest entrance on the north side, which would have led you into a manse accented by rich woods and intricate leaded glass. Architect Joseph C. Llewellyn, who’s known for his school buildings and who lived across the street, designed it for E.K. Boisot, vice president and manager of the First Trust and Savings Bank. More than a century later, the seven-bedroom, 5,188-square-foot home, not including the basement and the space on top of the garage, is listed for $1.55 million with Compass (currently under contract), and it still contains many vintage details.

Arguably the most eye-catching is the living room’s fireplace, with a vine-and-leaf glass mosaic by Giannini & Hilgart, the art glass firm behind the mosaic fireplace at the Richard H. Driehaus Museum. In the office, you’ll find a fold-down desk among the built-in wooden cabinetry; in the dining room, built-in display cases and a buffet blend with the wainscoting. Even the powder room features a tropical scene of flamingos and palm trees etched into glass.

Owner John Hamilton, a retired CEO, most recently of the former Veyance Technologies, is especially fond of the three-sided porch on the southern side of the house. The second-floor deck sits atop an addition that enlarged the kitchen and created a window-filled family room and eating area. Hamilton has the home’s blueprints and says they’ll stay with the house. In fact, the surprising floor plan is what he loves most about the property — that you can never tell what’s around the corner. “You walk through a room and it’s beautiful and spectacular,” he says. “And then you go, ‘Oh, there’s a door here. What’s over there?’ And then you discover another room, equally spectacular.” To be sure, it’s not just the more obvious attributes that catch your eye, Hamilton says. “Even the radiators are works of art.”

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The Best Fireplace in Metro Chicagoon February 8, 2021 at 7:02 pm Read More »

Reflecting on my reading habitson February 8, 2021 at 3:23 pm

Retired in Chicago

Reflecting on my reading habits

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Reflecting on my reading habitson February 8, 2021 at 3:23 pm Read More »

The Heath Dolls Are Set To Launch New Social Media Series Called “Inspired By”on February 8, 2021 at 4:26 pm

The Heath Dolls

The Heath Dolls Are Set To Launch New Social Media Series Called “Inspired By”

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The Heath Dolls Are Set To Launch New Social Media Series Called “Inspired By”on February 8, 2021 at 4:26 pm Read More »