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Thank you and be happyNicky Nion December 30, 2022 at 1:00 pm

“Thank You for Shopping With Us,” a pop-up exhibition featuring Chicago artist Thomas Kong and curated by S.Y. Lim, conjures a holiday spirit from unnoticed everyday materials: packaging waste. Kong takes over the corner atrium at the Design Museum of Chicago with rows and rows of plastic thank-you bags that hang across the floor-to-ceiling windows. Each bag serves as a canvas for a unique and colorful collage.

Kong, who also runs the convenience store Kim’s Corner Food in Rogers Park, is dexterous at putting excess into artistic use. Various cardboard papers are cut and arranged into abstract but curious shapes; some elicit their previous packaging duties, others stay completely anonymous. One of my favorites: a penny trapped inside of a plastic clamshell case, on top, a green leaf taped to white paper, below, a small orange block—is it a price tag? A post-it? Origin unknown. It’s plain and simple, almost deadpan funny.

Installation view, “Thank You for Shopping With Us,” Design Museum of Chicago, 2022  Credit: S.Y. Lim

Stacks of heavily decorated plastic crates comfortably occupy the angular gallery space as freestanding sculptures. The crates declare they are “property of KDP.” But in response, Kong covers up most of the label, leaving only KDP’s bubbly logo hanging like a pilcrow. A new paragraph of glyphs and symbols begins. What remains most memorable are small stickers that read “be happy,” which quietly appear in many of Kong’s compositions. Happiness, as the artist tries to tell us, is often hidden—amid the hurry of everyday life—in plain sight.

“Thank You for Shopping With Us”Through 1/31/23: Every day 10 AM-6 PM, Design Museum of Chicago, 72 E. Randolph, designchicago.org, free


Kim’s Corner Food owner Thomas Kong makes art from trash.


The Hyde Park Art Center is bringing back the spaces we’ve all missed.


The Chicago Design Museum searches for a permanent home and raises funds for an exhibit on 100 years of Chicago design.

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Thank you and be happyNicky Nion December 30, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

1 killed, 1 seriously hurt when car flips over and catches fire on Kennedy Expressway

A person was killed and another was seriously wounded when their car flipped over and caught fire early Thursday on the Kennedy Expressway.

The car was traveling south on the expressway when it crashed near the Addison Street ramp about 2 a.m., Illinois State Police said.

One person was pronounced dead at the scene and another was taken to a hospital with serious injuries, state police said.

No other injuries were reported.

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Can the Chicago Bulls find some positive momentum?Michael Labellarteon December 30, 2022 at 1:00 pm

The Chicago Bulls have been one of the most inconsistent teams in the NBA this season. They have found some success against a few of the elite teams in the league but they have also failed to beat the teams that are struggling.

The lack of consistency has led them to a 15-19 record which puts them as the tenth seed in the Eastern Conference right now.

After some locker room turmoil earlier this week, with it being reported that the team and Zach Lavine were not on good terms, the Bulls seem to have found their groove for the most part.

Big wins against the Miami Heat, Atlanta Hawks, New York Knicks, and now the Milwaukee Bucks have seemed to get the team playing better and the fans feeling better about the rest of the season.

The Chicago Bulls need to find a way to get back on track soon enough.

Still, the Bulls did lose to the Houston Rockets this week at home. This was a game in which the Bulls just did not take their opponent seriously enough and it cost them. We have seen this too much already this year.

Losses to teams like the San Antonio Spurs, Orlando Magic, and now the Houston Rockets have been the nail in the side of the Bulls all season. The Bulls have competed against the better teams this season.

They are 2-0 against the Milwaukee Bucks and 2-1 against the Boston Celtics who are the top two teams in the East this season. It just does not make a lot of sense. They can compete with and beat the elite teams but they play down to their competition against the bottom teams.

It seemed like the team hit rock bottom after allowing 151 points to the Minnesota Timberwolves. The team has responded with some better overall basketball. 4-1 in the last five games with wins over three playoff contenders will hopefully go a long way in turning things around.

Zach Lavine seems to be getting back to his All-Star form and DeMar DeRozan showed some of the late-game heroics that has been missing this year.

While the team still has a lot of work to do, this can be the turning point that the Chicago Bulls have been looking for to get back to playoff contention.

While some fans might want to live out the pipe dream of getting the number one overall pick and drafting Victor Wembayana, it seems that this season is either a playoff berth or losing the draft pick to the Magic.

The Bulls can build off a strong week to put some wins together and start to make some noise in the Eastern Conference again.

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Can the Chicago Bulls find some positive momentum?Michael Labellarteon December 30, 2022 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Tyler Johnson speaking up to try to help Blackhawks: ‘At least we’re trying to work together’

ST. LOUIS — As a lengthy Blackhawks practice finally wound down Wednesday, Tyler Johnson approached Luke Richardson during a break in drills.

Johnson, the veteran forward, and Richardson, the always all-ears-open coach, each gestured around at different spots in the offensive zone for a minute, then reached a common understanding and returned to their usual duties.

Richardson disclosed later that Johnson wasn’t just asking for clarification on a certain play, as one might’ve assumed. He was actually suggesting a new play.

“We were just discussing some of our ‘O’-zone options, trying to make it automatic so we can get ahead of the other team a little quicker,” Richardson said. “He threw his two cents in on a play we could maybe add to that, and I agreed. We actually practiced it once early in the season, but things kind of go in rotation…so we’ll probably add it in.

“I always like the players to discuss if we agree, disagree, or have thoughts on things to do better. They’re the guys out there playing and really feel what might be open and what might not be, so I like to have input.”

It’s somewhat rare for a player to take that kind of initiative, but it’s impressive that Johnson — a smart hockey mind with the experience (627 career NHL games) and track record (two Stanley Cups with the Lightning) to back up his ideas — did so. It demonstrates just how committed he is to trying to improve the team in spite of its overwhelmingly terrible record and lack of short-term ambition.

His string of bad luck with injuries, which cost him 56 games last season and 22 games so far this season, has made him appreciate more every day he’s healthy on the ice — and more committed to making impacts each of those days.

“It’s always tough when you don’t get the results,” Johnson said Wednesday. “But the one thing I’ll say is that, when I wasn’t playing, that was a lot harder not being able to contribute at all. Now, we can still build on things and work on things and talk about things. It just feels like at least we’re trying to work together, compared to fighting against each other.”

To call Johnson healthy at the moment is actually an exaggeration. He has played the last three games, yes, but he’s still dealing with pain in his left ankle. It’s not close to 100% and it won’t be for a while, potentially the rest of the season.

“[It] depends day by day,” he said. “It’s one of those things where you just have to go through it. But I’m doing alright.”

In spite of that handicap, he has been arguably the Hawks’ best forward this season, albeit in only 12 games to date.

He’s averaging 2.06 points per 60 minutes in five-on-five play, which not only leads the team but dwarfs second-place Phillipp Kurashev’s pace of 1.29. Surprisingly, Max Domi ranks third at 1.22 and Patrick Kane — with a large chunk of his team-leading point total coming on the power play — fourth at 1.15.

Johnson also leads the team in individual five-on-five scoring-chance generation, producing 10.3 per 60 minutes. Kane ranks second at 7.5, followed by Andreas Athanasiou at 7.4. And Johnson isn’t giving it back defensively as much as his teammates, either. His on-ice scoring-chance ratio of 45.0% leads team forwards, with Jujhar Khaira in second place at 43.8%.

Richardson has noticed that solid play. Last week, he inserted Johnson onto the first line with Kane and Domi, and they’ve shown promise.

“[Johnson is] the first guy in on the forecheck, and he finishes his check every time,” Richardson said. “He’s not the biggest guy, but he plays big. … [He also brings] maybe a touch more defensive consciousness out there. But we need him to have the ability to play with those guys, and he does.”

Former Hawks coach Jeremy Colliton had Johnson and Kane stapled together throughout 2021 training camp but then abruptly abandoned the idea, meaning they’d played only 15 total five-on-five minutes together before this recent move.

There’s clear logic behind putting them together, though. Johnson previously had success in Tampa alongside Nikita Kucherov, whose playing style he has often compared to Kane’s. He knows how to operate opposite a winger who needs the puck on his stick that much, which can be tricky for those unfamiliar.

“[Kane is] so good at finding guys, finding lanes, making plays,” Johnson said. “He doesn’t necessarily need someone attached to him at the hip, trying to win those battles and make those plays for him.

“I like to think a little more north-south than those guys. My game is more driving, creating space, open lanes and trying to find those areas. So we could work pretty well together.”

Perhaps they’ll work well enough together to even translate the new play Johnson suggested Wednesday into a goal at some point.

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White Sox Rumors: These are the best 2B options to considerTodd Welteron December 30, 2022 at 12:00 pm

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One of Leury Garcia, Romy Gonzalez, or Lenyn Sosa is slated to be the Chicago White Sox Opening Day starter at second base if general manager Rick Hahn does not make another offseason move. That is enough to make any Sox fan groan.

Second base has been a revolving door of players for the Sox for two decades. From 1995-2002, Ray Durham was a stalwart at second.

Since trading Durham midway through the 2002 season, the Chicago White Sox have had 14 different players log the greatest number of innings at second. Injuries or poor play forced the Sox to have seven different players there year after year.

Injuries or underperformance have been the running theme at second since 2002. Although Tadahito Iguchi played well during the 2005 World Series run. Other than that, it has been one failed prospect after another.

Second base remains a position hole in the lineup yet again heading into the 2023 season. General manager Rick Hahn needs to find a better solution than what they have.

There are a few solutions Hahn should consider to finally solve what feels like a never-ending problem on the Southside.

The Chicago White Sox are likely going to use Lenyn Sosa and Romy Gonzalez.

Going with internal options appears to be the direction Hahn might go.

White Sox looking at internal options for second base https://t.co/O3wgWtqgcE

— Daryl Van Schouwen (@CST_soxvan) December 24, 2022

Hahn indicated at the beginning of the offseason that the 2023 payroll would be around what the 2022 payroll was. Hahn is getting close to his ownership-mandated salary cap.

Hahn chose to use his free agent allowance to sign outfielder Andrew Benintendi and starting pitcher Mike Clevinger. He may not have a lot of financial resources left over to address second.

Well, he could if owner Jerry Reinsdorf realized baseball has no salary cap but you got a better chance of hitting the lottery. Also, the free-agent market is poor at second.

It is not like the Sox do not have options on their roster. It is just the choices are not the most attractive or satisfying during a contention window.

Garcia is still on the roster but as he proved last year, he is not an everyday player. He needs to go back to being the super-utility player he excelled at for a decade.

That leaves Lenyn Sosa and Romi Gonzalez to battle it out for the starting spot during Spring Training.

Yolbert Sanchez had a good season in the minor leagues and could be a dark horse to get the starting job. He is a long shot considering that he never got a call-up to the big leagues like Sosa and Gonzalez did last season.

Also, he was left unprotected in the MLB Rule 5 draft, it would appear he is not viewed very highly in the organization.

Gonzalez had 105 at-bats late in the 2022 season. His slash line was .238/.257/.352 with two home runs. He missed time in the Triple-A ball after needing to have his tonsils removed in June.

He did not put up the greatest numbers because of that. The Sox hope he can replicate his 2021 success when he slashed .267/.355/.502 at Double-A Birmingham.

Fangraphs does give him high grades in raw power and speed on the basepath. Those are two things their lineup could use. He has just three career walks at the Major-League level.

Sosa was called up in late June only to sit on the bench for most of the time he was with the Sox. He also had another cup of coffee in the show in mid-August.

Sosa only got 35 at-bats in 2022 and delivered four hits and a home run. He is just 22 whereas Gonzalez is 25. Fangraphs gives Sosa good prospect grades in fielding, raw power, and speed. Fangraphs also projects Sosa to have a 100 wRC+ if he makes it to the big leagues.

He did slash .315/.369/.552 last year in between Double-A and Triple-A ball. Both options are not name-brand solutions, but both have upside.

Also, neither is going to be asked to carry the offensive load. If one of them can prove they can provide a spark at the bottom of the lineup, then that is all the Chicago White Sox needs.

Really, they just need Sosa or Gonzalez to field the ball and anything offensively they can provide is a bonus. If both compete for the starting job, how the defense is what should be the main deciding factor.

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Blackhawks undermined by poor finishing in loss to Blues

ST. LOUIS — The Blackhawks have scored one or zero goals in eight of their last 11 games.

That’s a lot of numbers, but they tell a simple story: the Hawks barely score. And in a hard-fought but fruitless 3-1 loss Thursday against the Blues, that story held true once again.

“We’re getting some decent chances around the net,” Seth Jones said. “I don’t know if we’re running into hot goalies or what the case is. You [have to] think something’s going to give if we continue to stay the course.

“Mistakes are that much more magnified when we’re not putting the puck in the net.”

That they are, and one particular mistake Thursday was magnified so much it might as well have been in a biology lab.

That was Boris Katchouk’s inexplicable, blind, slow, backhand pass in the second period, which sent the puck from below the Hawks’ goal line to the middle of the slot with no teammate around. Blues defenseman Calle Rosen intercepted it like it was intended for him and ripped a shot past Hawks goalie Alex Stalock for what turned out to be the game-winning goal.

Hawks coach Luke Richardson had “not much” to say to Katchouk after the play, but Richardson tried his best to support the fourth-line grinder in his postgame comments.

“The players on the bench were really good, rallying around him and telling him to have a good shift the next time,” he said. “It’s hard to shake those off as a player, but you have to. He had a really good penalty kill at the end of the game…and he almost sprung himself for a break. That’s a good sign of a player overcoming a tough break and bad decision.”

Stalock remained stellar in his usual chaotic way — his 26 saves (on 28 shots) were actually a season low, exemplifying how well he has played — and the Hawks were cleaner and more efficient in all three zones against the Blues than against the Hurricanes.

When Katchouk makes that kind of error and the offensive finishing remains nonexistent, however, it’s nearly impossible for the Hawks to win.

“We had some pretty good looks,” Richardson said. “It didn’t go in as much as we’d like, but they’re there. When they’re not there, that’s when everybody gets really concerned.”

Lafferty avoids absence

Forward Sam Lafferty missed morning skate Thursday with an illness and was deemed a game-time decision, but by warmups, he was back on the third line with Jason Dickinson and Andreas Athanasiou. That was a relief for the Hawks; that trio has been arguably their best lately.

Richardson said Jujhar Khaira and MacKenzie Entwistle, who were both scratched, are also dealing with nagging minor injuries.

Mitchell scratched twice

On defense, meanwhile, Ian Mitchell has been scratched in favor of veterans Jack Johnson and Caleb Jones in consecutive games. That’s a curious decision, considering Johnson and Jones basically are who they are at this point, but Mitchell’s NHL upside has yet to be nailed down.

Richardson stumbled through an attempted explanation Wednesday, saying the Hawks scratched Mitchell on Tuesday because they wanted “good skaters” against the speedy Hurricanes. Mitchell was scratched Thursday so the Hawks would match up better against the “big, heavy” Blues.

Mitchell had played relatively well before the holiday break, scoring two points and averaging 18:03 of ice time in his last three games. But the Hawks don’t seem interested in giving the soon-to-be 24-year-old a steady NHL role.

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High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s holiday tournament notebook

PONTIAC–Carlos Harris stepped up right when his team needed him most on Thursday.

“That’s his job,” Curie coach Mike Oliver said. “I challenged him. He wants to be the guy driving the bus so he has to step up and score in the big situations. Luckily he did tonight.”

Harris finished with 19 points in the Condors’ 50-44 win against New Trier in the quarterfinals of the 91st Pontiac Holiday Tournament.

The junior guard scored nine points in an 11-0 third quarter run that saw Curie take control of the game. Harris left with an injured knee with 2:24 to play and the Condors leading New Trier 45-39. Curie had to see the game out without him.

“I was worried,” Oliver said. “But we have guys that have been there before and they tend to step up.”

Chikasi Ofoma scored eight points and grabbed six rebounds and Jeremy Harrington added seven points for the Condors (10-3).

Jake Fiegen led the Trevians (13-2) with 21 points and Ian Brown scored nine.

Harris was on crutches after the game but Oliver said he was hopeful it was just a sprain.

Benet 49, Bloom 43Joliet West 57, Lockport 33

Simeon vs. Pontiac, 7:30

Bloomington (State Farm)

Sacred Heart-Griffin 58, Wheaton-Warrenville South 41: The defending Class 3A state champs pulled away in the third quarter. Jake Hamilton scored 21 and Zack Hawkinson added 19. Braylen Meredith led the Tigers with 15 points.

Romeoville 59, Mesa AZ 39: A really nice win for the Spartans against the team that knocked Brother Rice out of the tournament. Junior Meyoh Swansey scored 19 and senior Troy Cicero Jr. added 13. Romeoville will be underdogs in the title game.

Hinsdale Central championship

Oswego East vs. Hinsdale Central, 8:30

Pekin championship

Mount Carmel 74, Moline 61: It’s back-to-back titles for the Caravan. Angelo Ciaravino scored 20, his brother Anthony scored 18 and so did DeAndre Craig. Moline, which has a pair of Iowa recruits, impressed observers over the summer and had a lofty spot in the Class 4A AP rankings. This is a big win for the Catholic League after Brother Rice and St. Ignatius both fell short of holiday titles.

Proviso West championship

Young vs. Kenwood, 7:00

Rich (Big Dipper) semifinals

Perspectives-Lead vs. Hyde Park, 6:30

Rich vs. Hillcrest, 8:00

Wheeling semifinals

Libertyville vs. Neuqua Valley, 7:15

Fremd vs. Glenbrook North, 8:45

York semifinals

Lyons 66, St. Ignatius 47: Nik Polonowski scored 19, Connor Carroll had 18 and Jackson Niego added 14. The Lions’ ball movement was really impressive. Tom Sloan’s squad just looked very cohesive and the rebounded well in the second half. I watched this one on the great York Sports Network stream. Richard Barron led the Wolfpack with 24 points.

Rolling Meadows vs. Bolingbrook, 8:00

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Blackhawks prospects and Team Canada dominate once againVincent Pariseon December 30, 2022 at 2:51 am

The Chicago Blackhawks are one of the worst teams in the National Hockey League as we have to discuss on pretty much a daily basis. The reason we have to discuss this is that it will heavily impact everything about their future.

Speaking of their future, the World Junior Championships are going on right now. The teams that the Blackhawks have their eyes on the most change every year but this year it is Canada. They have four Blackhawks prospects playing for them.

For the second straight game, Canada absolutely dominated their opponent. This time, they beat Austria by a final score of 11-0. It was a dominant performance from pretty much everyone as they seem to be all the way back following that one tough loss to the Czech in the opener.

In the last game against Germany, Colton Dach and Kevin Korchinski were the two Blackhawks’ prospects that found their way onto the scoresheet. In this game, neither of them found it.

However, neither Nolan Allan nor Ethan del Mastro had a point in the last game but they each had one in this game. del Mastro had an assist and Allan had a goal to help contribute to Canada’s dominance. This was a flawless game for them all against a much weaker opponent.

The Chicago Blackhawks have to love what they are seeing from Team Canada.

Lots of Blackhawks fans have their eyes on Adam Fantilli as he will be the second overall pick in the 2023 NHL Draft. He shot one through traffic that ended up in the back of the net. He also added an assist on the night for a two-point performance.

Connor Bedard, however, is a different story. After a seven-point night a day earlier, he followed it up with a six-point night this time. He had two goals and four assists to help lead Canada to this crazy big win over Austria. He will be the number one pick in the draft, a spot ahead of Fantilli.

This tournament has been a huge success so far for Blackhawks fans. Their guys are contributing and the two players that the team has their eye on at the top of the draft are doing their thing as well.

Canada’s next game will come on Saturday against Sweden who is very good as well. However, now that Canada is in a groove, it is hard to see anyone else beating them. This is one of the most impressive teams we’ve seen at the World Juniors in a while. It will be interesting to see how it ends.

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Blackhawks prospects and Team Canada dominate once againVincent Pariseon December 30, 2022 at 2:51 am Read More »

Chicago Cubs News: Rafael Devers is a perfect trade targetVincent Pariseon December 30, 2022 at 1:50 am

The Chicago Cubs are in the business of getting better right now. They have been rebuilding for a couple of years now and have made it clear that their intention is to start rising up the standings again. So far, the offseason has actually been good to them.

There have been some good acquisitions this offseason but there are a few more that they could make in order to build their team for a better future.

Jed Hoyer has a previous history with the Boston Red Sox as he was a big part of their organization for a long time. Now would be a great time for them to make a big trade that could help both franchises out in the long term.

It doesn’t sound as if they are going to pay Rafael Devers the amount of money that he is commanding. They have already traded Mookie Betts and let Xander Bogaerts walk in free agency so why would anything change with Rafael Devers?

The Chicago Cubs make perfect sense for a Rafael Devers trade right now.

The Cubs have a lot to offer that would make it a good trade for Boston. Guys like Brennan Davis, Pete Crow-Armstrong, or Ed Howard amongst others could be good players that the Boston Red sox consider for a player like Devers. It is going to take a lot in order to make a trade like this if you are the Cubs.

It would be worth it for the Cubs as they could use Devers as what would be a very good infield. Devers would play third, Dansby Swanson would be the shortstop, and Nico Hoerner would be the second baseman. After that, they would just need to work on first base in the long term.

There are going to be a lot of teams involved with Devers but the Cubs have some of the prospect firepower that would be needed in order to make a trade like this.

The Red Sox would be kind of foolish to let a player like Devers leave but if it happens, the Chicago Cubs should be all over it. If they added him right now, they would be considered a playoff contender for sure.

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Chicago Cubs News: Rafael Devers is a perfect trade targetVincent Pariseon December 30, 2022 at 1:50 am Read More »