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Game Post 9/9Sean Hollandon September 9, 2020 at 11:06 pm

Cubs Den

Game Post 9/9

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Game Post 9/9Sean Hollandon September 9, 2020 at 11:06 pm Read More »

Now what? Will the woke next cancel Charles Darwin?Dennis Byrneon September 9, 2020 at 11:20 pm

The Barbershop: Dennis Byrne, Proprietor

Now what? Will the woke next cancel Charles Darwin?

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Now what? Will the woke next cancel Charles Darwin?Dennis Byrneon September 9, 2020 at 11:20 pm Read More »

High school basketball notebook: Pandemic taking toll on holiday tournamentsMichael O’Brienon September 9, 2020 at 4:04 pm

Football season has been moved to spring. At this point it seems unlikely that there will be anything close to a state tournament in any sport.

Over the past week another staple of high school sports was faced with cancellations due to COVID-19: holiday basketball tournaments.

Centralia, Bloomington, Marseilles and Effingham all canceled last week. The Big Dipper, hosted by Rich South, canceled on Thursday.

The Big Dipper field consists of south suburban and south side Chicago schools, so there was a small hope that it was one of the tournaments that would find a way to exist.

“We tried to see if there was any way to possibly have it,” Rich Township Athletic Director Omari Garrett said. “But as the days and weeks went on we realized we wouldn’t be able to put it on the way we wanted do. We didn’t want just two teams in at a time and then everyone leaving. The Dipper is about the experience and we wanted it to be the full experience or nothing at all.”

The Big Dipper has been on the decline over the past decade, but things were finally starting to look up. Garrett had added Hillcrest, Hyde Park, TF South and Lincoln-Way Central to this year’s field.

Proviso West officials say they have not made a decision yet on their holiday tournament. There has also been no word from Pontiac, York and Hinsdale Central.

The Chicago Elite Classic event traditionally held at Wintrust Arena will likely look much different. Nothing is official yet, but there clearly won’t be any out-of-state teams involved. Don’t be surprised if host coaches Tyrone Slaughter of Young and Robert Smith of Simeon figure something out to keep the brand alive though, perhaps a Young vs. Simeon showdown to tip-off the season.

On the move

Several talented players have recently decided to move out of state. Kankakee’s AJ Storr and Bolingbrook’s Kai Evans both left for schools in Las Vegas. Lincoln Park’s Ismail Habib is now in Maryland and Fenwick’s Trey Pettigrew moved to Arizona.

There has also been the usual movement around the area. Jalen Houston has left Hyde Park for Bogan and Walt Mattingly left Deerfield for Lake Forest. Amarion Osborne has transferred from Vocational to Kankakee.

Mike Irvin’s arrival at Kenwood is already making an impact. Darrin Ames, who played at Morgan Park as a freshman, is now at Kenwood and 6-7 Davius Loury has left Simeon to play for the Broncos.

The biggest local transfer story has yet to play out. AJ Casey, the state’s top junior, is not currently enrolled at Tinley Park. Casey played his freshman year at Simeon and was with the Titans last season.

Rumors have swirled for a year that Casey would eventually wind up at Young but the family hasn’t confirmed anything yet.

A new name

Few high school basketball fans have ever seen Longwood play. That could change this year, assuming fans are ever allowed at games.

Former Washington star Keyon Smothers took over the program last season and was an instant success, leading the Panthers to an 18-9 record, 8-1 and first place in the White-South.

Smothers has two key players back, Jamarion Walker and Adam Claybounre. And he’s added some transfers to help out in the school’s first-ever season in the Red.

Junior Damarcies Moore, a 6-5 wing, transferred from Bogan. He received positive reviews from scouts after playing at a Pangos Showcase in Utah last month.

Two new guards have arrived as well. Lionel Wilson transferred in from Collins and DaQuan Hargrove from Julian.

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High school basketball notebook: Pandemic taking toll on holiday tournamentsMichael O’Brienon September 9, 2020 at 4:04 pm Read More »

Fire safety tips from Troubled Hubble on the gig poster of the weekSalem Collo-Julinon September 9, 2020 at 11:00 am

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This week we’ve got another fantasy poster for a real gig! Writer and graphic designer Brian Shamie, who works for the Daily Herald and runs the site Chicago Sound Check, created this poster a year or so after the 2015 Troubled Hubble concert it depicts–the band’s first reunion date since breaking up in 2005. “I wasn’t able to make this Troubled Hubble show,” Shamie tells me via e-mail, “but about a year later, that line in the song [‘14,000 Things to Be Happy About’] was haunting me and I needed to get the vision out of my head.”

A scan of the Reader archives reveals that Troubled Hubble has had a similar effect on some of our writers. In 2003, Monica Kendrick previewed a concert at Gunther Murphy’s (RIP) in her Spot Check column, predicting that their songs “will be embraced by a fervent few today and recognized as unheralded classics tomorrow.” And Gossip Wolf wrote a little something in advance of the reunion show illustrated on Shamie’s poster: “This wolf recommends Troubled Hubble to anyone keen on the Dismemberment Plan’s off-center pop.”

Shamie’s work represents one of the possibilities for readers who’d like to share something in this space. It’s the second time we’ve published a fictional poster for a concert that actually happened–and we welcome more. We continue to accept submissions of made-up posters for made-up gigs, made-up posters for shows that really happened, posters for livestreamed shows, and of course posters for concerts where the audience can attend in person.

To participate, please e-mail [email protected] with your name, contact information, and your original design or drawing (you can attach a JPG or PNG file or provide a download link). We won’t be able to publish everything we receive, but we’ll feature as many as possible. Your submission can also include a nonprofit, fundraiser, or action campaign that you’d like to bring to the attention of our readers.

Not everybody can make a gig poster, of course, but it’s simple and free to take action through the website of the National Independent Venue Association–click here to tell your representatives to save our homegrown music ecosystems. And anybody with a few bucks to spare can support the out-of-work staffers at Chicago’s venues–here’s our list of fundraisers. Lastly, don’t forget record stores! The Reader has published a list of local stores that will let you shop remotely.


ARTIST: Brian Shamie
GIG: Troubled Hubble, Inspector Owl, and Truman & His Trophy at Subterranean on Saturday, September 5, 2015
ARTIST INFO: instagram.com/thatshamieguy
NPO TO KNOW: Brian Shamie writes, “Chicago and the suburbs have so many cool venues that have been shuttered most of this year, so any help to a venue directly or through the Chicago Independent Venue League would be so appreciated.”

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Fire safety tips from Troubled Hubble on the gig poster of the weekSalem Collo-Julinon September 9, 2020 at 11:00 am Read More »

Thank You, I’m Sorry harnesses midwestern emo to conquer unyielding malaise on I’m Glad We’re FriendsLeor Galilon September 9, 2020 at 1:00 pm

Most Americans felt the pinch of chronic financial instability even before COVID-19 aggravated the country’s catastrophic wealth inequality by helping shift billions more dollars into the pockets of a handful of billionaires. So even if you don’t recognize yourself in the lyrics of Thank You, I’m Sorry’s “Menthol Flavored Oatmeal”–which describes a twentysomething working ten-hour days at a minimum-wage service job that barely makes a dent in their college tuition–you can probably relate to the band’s front person, Colleen Dow, when they gloomily sing about enduring the pressure cooker of early adulthood (though they wrote the tune before anybody had to consider the dire health risk of attending in-person classes or working a service-industry job during a pandemic). Thank You, I’m Sorry is an emo band now, but Dow launched it as a solo project–in February, they released a self-recorded acoustic album, The Malta House, named after the village of Malta, more than an hour west of Chicago in DeKalb County. This month’s I’m Glad We’re Friends (Count Your Lucky Stars), recorded by the trio version of Thank You, I’m Sorry, includes much of the same material. Bassist Bethunni Schreiner and drummer Sage Livergood give Dow’s tunes a sprightly pop-punk flair (the power-up drum pattern that opens “Ten Dollar Latte” sounds like a subtle homage to Blink-182’s “Feeling This”), adding just enough locomotive force to prop up Dow’s droopiest riffs without undercutting the music’s malaise. Even as Dow sings about feeling perpetually immobilized by everyday misfortune, the band’s understated drive suggests that this too shall pass. v

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Thank You, I’m Sorry harnesses midwestern emo to conquer unyielding malaise on I’m Glad We’re FriendsLeor Galilon September 9, 2020 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: 3 “x-factors” against the Detroit LionsPatrick Sheldonon September 9, 2020 at 11:00 am

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Chicago Bears: 3 “x-factors” against the Detroit LionsPatrick Sheldonon September 9, 2020 at 11:00 am Read More »

Goat Weed Traces Its Reputation for Helping Men’s Health Issues Back Millennia — But Take Care in its Usetwinon September 9, 2020 at 1:57 am

All is Well

Goat Weed Traces Its Reputation for Helping Men’s Health Issues Back Millennia — But Take Care in its Use

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Goat Weed Traces Its Reputation for Helping Men’s Health Issues Back Millennia — But Take Care in its Usetwinon September 9, 2020 at 1:57 am Read More »

How the COVID-19 Quarantine Is Impacting Domestic Violence in America — and How to Get Helptwinon September 9, 2020 at 2:06 am

All is Well

How the COVID-19 Quarantine Is Impacting Domestic Violence in America — and How to Get Help

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How the COVID-19 Quarantine Is Impacting Domestic Violence in America — and How to Get Helptwinon September 9, 2020 at 2:06 am Read More »

Former Illinois FCS stars making impacts on NFL rostersDan Verdunon September 9, 2020 at 10:32 am

Prairie State Pigskin

Former Illinois FCS stars making impacts on NFL rosters

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Former Illinois FCS stars making impacts on NFL rostersDan Verdunon September 9, 2020 at 10:32 am Read More »