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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon December 12, 2022 at 8:00 am

Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky riffs on the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty, and interviews politicians, activists, journalists and other political know-it-alls. Presented by the Chicago Reader, the show is available by 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays at chicagoreader.com/joravsky—or wherever you get your podcasts. Don’t miss Oh, What a Week!–the Friday feature in which Ben & producer Dennis (aka, Dr. D.) review the week’s top stories. Also, bonus interviews drop on Saturdays, Sundays, and Mondays. 

Chicago Reader podcasts are recorded on Shure microphones. Learn more at Shure.com.

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Chicago Reader senior writer Ben Joravsky discusses the day’s stories with his celebrated humor, insight, and honesty on The Ben Joravsky Show.


The Florida strategy

MAGA’s attempt to scare white voters into voting against Pritzker didn’t work so well, to put it mildly.


It worked!

Leasing CHA land to the Chicago Fire is part of a longstanding plan to gentrify the city.


MAGA flip-flops

Men from Blago to Bolduc are trying to sing a new song.

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Listen to The Ben Joravsky ShowBen Joravskyon December 12, 2022 at 8:00 am Read More »

The NBA’s most dominant paint player might be … 6-foot-2 Ja Morant?on December 12, 2022 at 3:57 pm

HOW DOES A 6-foot-2 point guard whose self-described weight is “175 soaking wet” rank right up there with the NBA’s best big men in paint scoring?

“Because motherf—ers can’t stay in front of me,” Ja Morant told ESPN aftering pondering the question for about as long as it takes him to get from the 3-point line to the rim with a clear lane.

Morant laughs, but there is truth to his jest. The Memphis Grizzlies‘ 23-year-old superstar became the first guard to lead the league in points in the paint in at least 25 years last season, doing so with a repertoire of moves to get around, under and sometimes over even the tallest defenders in the league.

Morant’s blink-and-he’s-gone burst, ability to change directions at full speed and ballhandling skills are certainly significant factors in his interior scoring dominance. So are the bunny-like hops that allow him to occasionally dunk on 7-footers in traffic.

But it’s too simple to point only at the spectacular as an explanation for how one of the league’s smallest players routinely dominates where size and strength typically reign supreme.

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Consider one early November game, where on four separate plays, Morant displays the combination of explosiveness, finesse, feel and film study that makes him such a unique force in the paint.

“People look at that athletic stuff, but that happens once a game or once every two games,” Grizzlies shooting guard Desmond Bane said of Morant’s highlight-reel dunks and ahead of the team’s game against the Atlanta Hawks on Monday (8 p.m. ET on NBA TV).

“But he finishes with 26 points and 20 of them are in the paint, so it’s like, how the hell did he get the other 18?”

IN THE OPENING minute of the Grizzlies’ Nov. 11 home win against the Minnesota Timberwolves, Morant goes to work.

He uses a screen from bruising center Steven Adams — the NBA’s version of a run-blocking right tackle — near the left sideline about 30 feet from the basket. Anthony Edwards can’t work around it, giving Morant the opportunity to isolate against Rudy Gobert with a runway in front of him.

Morant stays in first gear as he dribbles slowly down the middle of the floor, seemingly waiting for the right split second to accelerate. Gobert tries to remain an arm’s length from Morant, but is most concerned about protecting the rim, aware of potential backdoor cuts for lobs or layups as well as the threat of Morant attacking.

“Obviously, he’s very athletic and a very crafty finisher, but he can really pass,” Gobert said. “The lob, the pass to the shooters — as a defense, when the guy who’s got the ball in his hands most of the time can find the open man, that’s what separates the good from the great.”

As Morant crosses the free throw line, Gobert gives just a little too much cushion. Morant leaps off two feet in front of the dotted line — going up, up, up — and releases a right-handed floater just above the three-time Defensive Player of the Year’s outstretched arm. Swish.

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The NBA’s most dominant paint player might be … 6-foot-2 Ja Morant?on December 12, 2022 at 3:57 pm Read More »

Patti LaBelle rushed off stage, theater evacuated after bomb threat

MILWAUKEE, Wis. — Patti LaBelle was abruptly rushed off stage just a couple of songs into her Christmas concert in Milwaukee after a bomb threat forced authorities to evacuate the theater.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports that video from the Riverside Theater on Saturday night shows what appears to be two security officers interrupting the 78-year-old LaBelle as she chats with an audience member. They rush her off stage. Shortly after, someone announced that the nearly full 2,500-seat theater had to be evacuated because of a bomb threat.

Catherine Brunson, who documented the evacuation on Facebook Live, told the newspaper that the evacuation happened two songs into LaBelle’s concert around 9:24 p.m.

“We came out and police had the block taped off. … A whole lot of people were pretty upset. … It’s scary,” Brunson said.

Scott Pierce, who also attended the concert, said everyone exited the theater calmly, but it’s “just sad that someone does this.”

Milwaukee Police Capt. Warren Allen Jr. said in a statement early Sunday that K9 units searched the theater and no explosive devices were discovered, so there was no threat to the public.

As of Sunday morning, LaBelle hadn’t issued a statement about the evacuation on social media. The operator of the Riverside Theater, Pabst Theater Group, said it would work with LaBelle to reschedule the show in the future.

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Chicago’s ‘Walking Man’ dies several months after being set on fire on Lower Wacker

Chicago’s ‘Walking Man’ died Sunday afternoon, several months after he was set on fire as he slept on Lower Wabash Avenue.

Joseph Kromelis, 75, died Sunday afternoon, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Kromelis — a homeless man known for walking the streets of the Loop — was sleeping under blankets in the 400 block of North Lower Wabash Avenue on the night of May 25 when surveillance cameras captured Joseph Guardia, 27, walking up and standing over him silently for 16 seconds, prosecutors said in a court hearing in May.

The video allegedly shows Guardia walking to a nearby intersection then returning and pouring gasoline over Kromelis’ uncovered head and igniting it.

Doctors initially said the 75-year-old was not expected to recover after he was lit on fire for nearly three minutes. His upper body was engulfed in flames, and he suffered third-degree burns over 65% of his body.

About four months later, Kromelis was discharged from Stroger Hospital and continued to recover at a rehab facility, having to undergo additional surgeries.

Guardia provided no other motive than “being an angry person, and claimed he wanted to burn trash but did not realize there was a person there.”

Six years earlier — on May 24, 2016 — Kromelis was brutally beaten by someone with a baseball bat in the 400 block of East Lower Wacker Drive. The two were struggling over the bat when police arrived.

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Global house luminary Honey Dijon returns to her native Chicago to celebrate the new Black Girl Magic

House music never went out of style, but not everybody knows about its culture, its history, or even its existence—and a legion of those newbies fell for house this year, thanks to new dance-oriented albums from superstars Drake and Beyoncé. The latter recruited figures from across house history for Renaissance, including Chicago native Honey Redmond, better known as Honey Dijon. She’s been spinning records for nearly a quarter century and part of the scene for even longer—she recently told the New York Times that she snuck into the Muzic Box, the 80s club where Ron Hardy reigned, at age 13. When she moved to New York City in the late 90s, she carried the imprint of the first couple waves of Chicago house, and over the decades to come, her DJ skills made her an international phenomenon. Classic Chicago house—with its effusive melodies, its joyous queerness, and its welcoming euphoria—is all over Dijon’s second album, November’s Black Girl Magic (Classic Music Company). Sleek, urbane keys and light-on-its-feet electronic percussion root the album’s insistent pulse, creating a magical elixir that can persuade you any surface is a dance floor. Black Girl Magic foregrounds vocals, and Dijon has recruited a panoply of guests (including Compton rapper Channel Tres and Ruff Ryders affiliate Eve) whose every ringing syllable lets everyone who’s listening know they’re welcome to the party. I’m a sucker for “C’s Up,” where Chosen Few member Mike Dunn invites you to take a trip on Lake Shore Drive, delivering his lines in a low, sultry rumble that promises thrills he can’t even describe; it’s a reminder that the journey Dijon took to become a global dance ambassador began in Chicago.

Honey Dijon DJ Heather and Shaun J. Wright open. Sat 12/17, 11:30 PM, Metro, 3730 N. Clark, $35 at the door, sold out online, 21+

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Global house luminary Honey Dijon returns to her native Chicago to celebrate the new Black Girl MagicLeor Galilon December 12, 2022 at 12:00 pm

House music never went out of style, but not everybody knows about its culture, its history, or even its existence—and a legion of those newbies fell for house this year, thanks to new dance-oriented albums from superstars Drake and Beyoncé. The latter recruited figures from across house history for Renaissance, including Chicago native Honey Redmond, better known as Honey Dijon. She’s been spinning records for nearly a quarter century and part of the scene for even longer—she recently told the New York Times that she snuck into the Muzic Box, the 80s club where Ron Hardy reigned, at age 13. When she moved to New York City in the late 90s, she carried the imprint of the first couple waves of Chicago house, and over the decades to come, her DJ skills made her an international phenomenon. Classic Chicago house—with its effusive melodies, its joyous queerness, and its welcoming euphoria—is all over Dijon’s second album, November’s Black Girl Magic (Classic Music Company). Sleek, urbane keys and light-on-its-feet electronic percussion root the album’s insistent pulse, creating a magical elixir that can persuade you any surface is a dance floor. Black Girl Magic foregrounds vocals, and Dijon has recruited a panoply of guests (including Compton rapper Channel Tres and Ruff Ryders affiliate Eve) whose every ringing syllable lets everyone who’s listening know they’re welcome to the party. I’m a sucker for “C’s Up,” where Chosen Few member Mike Dunn invites you to take a trip on Lake Shore Drive, delivering his lines in a low, sultry rumble that promises thrills he can’t even describe; it’s a reminder that the journey Dijon took to become a global dance ambassador began in Chicago.

Honey Dijon DJ Heather and Shaun J. Wright open. Sat 12/17, 11:30 PM, Metro, 3730 N. Clark, $35 at the door, sold out online, 21+

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Global house luminary Honey Dijon returns to her native Chicago to celebrate the new Black Girl MagicLeor Galilon December 12, 2022 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago’s ‘Walking Man’ dies several months after being set on fire on Lower Wacker

Chicago’s ‘Walking Man’ died Sunday afternoon, several months after he was set on fire as he slept on Lower Wabash Avenue.

Joseph Kromelis, 75, died Sunday afternoon, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Kromelis — a homeless man known for walking the streets of the Loop — was sleeping under blankets in the 400 block of North Lower Wabash Avenue on the night of May 25 when surveillance cameras captured Joseph Guardia, 27, walking up and standing over him silently for 16 seconds, prosecutors said in a court hearing in May.

The video allegedly shows Guardia walking to a nearby intersection then returning and pouring gasoline over Kromelis’ uncovered head and igniting it.

Doctors initially said the 75-year-old was not expected to recover after he was lit on fire for nearly three minutes. His upper body was engulfed in flames, and he suffered third-degree burns over 65% of his body.

About four months later, Kromelis was discharged from Stroger Hospital and continued to recover at a rehab facility, having to undergo additional surgeries.

Guardia provided no other motive than “being an angry person, and claimed he wanted to burn trash but did not realize there was a person there.”

Six years earlier — on May 24, 2016 — Kromelis was brutally beaten by someone with a baseball bat in the 400 block of East Lower Wacker Drive. The two were struggling over the bat when police arrived.

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Bulls lose another heart-breaker, and have only themselves to blame

ATLANTA – Derrick Jones Jr. did almost everything right on the play.

Almost.

And for a Bulls team that spends way too many early quarters seemingly OK with nonchalant turnovers and digging themselves into deficits, almost can be haunting.

Even when there’s less than a second left on the clock and victory is in hand.

Thanks to an unbelievable twisting alley-oop lay-in at the horn by AJ Griffin – yes, the son of former Bulls assistant coach Adrian Griffin – Atlanta not only snatched victory away from the Bulls in the 123-122 overtime win, but snatched a couple hearts out along the way.

“We’ve had enough trial and error,” Bulls veteran DeMar DeRozan said of the latest loss. “We know what works when we do it right, and at this point we should know what doesn’t work when we’re doing it wrong. This one sucks, this one hurts.”

DeRozan wasn’t alone in that feeling.

Jones was right there with him, especially after helping the Bulls overcome a 12-point deficit off the bench, and also having a chance to play hero.

With the game tied and 2.1 second left, Trae Young hit a 20-foot step back to put the momentum solely on the shoulders of the home team. Out of the time out and advancing the ball, however, it was DeRozan doing DeRozan things, catching the inbound beyond the three-point line and immediately getting fouled by Bogdan Bogdanovic with that half a second left on the shot attempt.

DeRozan made all three free throws, setting the stage for Griffin’s heroics.

Out of the first set, Young was the inbounder and had to call another timeout after the Bulls defended the back-cut perfectly. Jalen Johnson was the inbounder for the second attempt of running a play, and the Hawks used Young as the decoy, having him run off a stack of picks to pull the defense out.

Jones switched on to Griffin, but as Johnson tossed the ball up towards the hoop, Jones took his eye off the ball for a split second. A split second was all Griffin needed.

He caught the ball in the air, and in one motion twisted his body to connect on the lay-in.

“It wasn’t going in the entire game … they drew a play for me and I really appreciate that,” Griffin said of the play. “You’ve got a lot of things going on in your head, but you just want to get the shot off.”

Which would have been nearly impossible if the high-riser in Jones would have seen the ball.

“I did take my eye off the ball for a second, but I’ve just got to be better in that situation,” Jones said. “Honestly, if I would have seen the ball, nobody in this league jumps higher than me, so I would have definitely got that.”

What Jones and the Bulls (11-15) got was another loss, and more questions to answer, especially about a first half that was there for the taking if they could have only stayed out of their own way.

After playing a very clean game against Dallas just 24 hours earlier, the Bulls had their share of some iffy shot selection, but the head scratcher was a nonchalant attitude with the basketball. There were four Zach LaVine turnovers in the first quarter alone, eight team turnovers by halftime, and 15 by the end of the third quarter.

So while DeRozan’s 34 points and late-game heroics were nice, the veteran wasn’t at all satisfied and didn’t want his team satisfied.

“We feel it now,” DeRozan said. “We’ve dug ourselves a hole and now we’ve made it hard on ourselves where every single game is extremely important. That’s how we’ve got to approach it if we want to make something happen out of it.”

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High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s Super 25 rankings for Dec. 11, 2022

Another long weekend of high school basketball is in the books. I’ve now seen 21 of the 25 ranked teams play, so I have a much better handle on things.

The quick list of teams I’d say impressed me as better than I expected them to be in the preseason: Simeon, Joliet West, Benet, Hillcrest, St. Ignatius, Bloom, Lincoln-Way East, Hyde Park, Proviso East, Lemont.

Marist, Rolling Meadows, New Trier and Lyons are the four ranked teams I haven’t had a chance to cover yet.

Marist is the only team added this week. Oak Lawn falls out after losing to Evergreen Park and Hinsdale Central. The Spartans still have that big win over Mount Carmel on their resume though, so don’t forget about them.

A lot of the holiday tournament pairings were released over the weekend. Tomorrow I’ll post a story with everything I’ve seen so far. No word yet on Proviso West. It’s possible I will get the Big Dipper pairings tomorrow.

Super 25 for Dec. 11, 2022With record and last week’s ranking

1. Simeon (6-0) 1Playing in Arkansas next weekend

2. Kenwood (6-1) 2Lost in Atlanta

3. Joliet West (7-2) 3In Madison next weekend

4. St. Rita (4-3) 5Won at Brother Rice

5. Young (4-3) 4Went 1-2 in DC

6. Brother Rice (9-1) 6Knocked off Bloom

7. Benet (8-0) 8Hosts Marian Catholic Friday

8. Hillcrest (8-1) 9Played well vs. East St. Louis

9. St. Ignatius (7-1) 10Reggie Ray can play

10. New Trier (8-1) 18Beat Rolling Meadows

11. Mount Carmel (8-1) 17Took down Curie

12. Curie (7-3) 11Looking for a leader

13. Rolling Meadows (9-1) 7Fell short vs. Trevians

14. Glenbrook North (8-0) 12Patrick Schaller has emerged

15. Bolingbrook (6-1) 13Winning shorthanded

16. Bloom (5-2) 14Loaded with potential

17. Marian Catholic (7-2) 16Handled Evanston

18. Lincoln-Way East (7-1) 20Hosts Andrew Tuesday

19. Oswego East (8-1) 21Faces Curie Saturday

20. Lyons (6-0) 22Beat Glenbard West

21. Hyde Park (7-1) 23Takes on Romeoville Saturday

22. Proviso East (5-1) 24Knocked off De La Salle

23. Lemont (9-0) 25Castillo twins are dominating

24. Evanston (7-2) 19Searching for shooting

25. Marist (8-0) NRYoung and unbeaten

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High school basketball: Michael O’Brien’s notebook

Marian Catholic senior Quentin Jones had a couple highlight-reel moments in the Spartans’ 57-45 win against Evanston on Sunday in the Team Rose Shootout at Mount Carmel. But that wasn’t really what he and his teammates were focusing on.

“We showed grit,” Jones said.

“It was a messy, sloppy, physical grind of a game. Not the best to watch, but it’s what Marian Catholic coach Mike Taylor really wanted to see out of his team.

“We had to establish some toughness and have a chance to win in the last three minutes,” Taylor said. “That’s the toughest we’ve played all year. That’s the only way we are going to win. We aren’t terifically skilled. We took a step forward today.”

Jones, a Cal Poly recruit, scored 19 points and Donovan Juzang added 12.

Taylor has been impressed with how Jones has started the season.

“If he can just find that happy medium of when to go and when to tempo it we might see something special in the second half of the season because he’s pretty hard to guard,” Taylor said.

Marian Catholic junior James Bullock battled valiantly in the post with Evanston senior Prince Adams and grabbed seven rebounds.

“It was a tough matchup [with Adams],” Bullock said. “He gets off the floor quick. I was just trying to play hard and physical.”

Adams finished with 24 points, 12 rebounds and four blocked shots. The Wildkits lost to Glenbrook North on Thursday and are now 7-2.

“We just didn’t get into any flow and rhythm other than Prince,” Evanston coach Mike Ellis said. “He tried to put us on his back and it wasn’t enough.”

Brother Rice 50, Bloom 46: The Crusaders didn’t score a basket in the fourth quarter but held on to win thanks to a late steal by Khalil Ross. Senior guard Ahmad Henderson led Brother Rice with 14 points.

The Blazing Trojans started strong and led by nine in the second quarter. Brother Rice took control with a 9-0 run to end the first half and never trailed again.

Jordan Brown led Bloom with 18 and Jayden Watson added 10 points and five rebounds.

Rich 88, Lindblom 69: This was my first look at Rich freshman Jamson Coulter and he delivered, finishing with 27 points and six rebounds. He gets to the rim and his overall game is a solid and confident as most senior guards.

“He’s probably the best freshman in the state,” Raptors coach Lou Adams said. “The sky is the limit. He can play. He has a motor, can handle it and shoot it.”

Junior Samar Bures added 23 points for Rich, which played without senior Ray Austin. Adams says Austin is expected to return next week.

“We’ve had a chance to win every game we played but Marian Catholic,” Adams said. “We should be 7-1, but I’ll take it. We didn’t have a senior on the floor.”

Junior Je’Shawn Stevenson Jr. led Lindblom with 27 points and five rebounds. Junior guard Quentin McCoy added 14.

Proviso East 74, De La Salle 61: Bryce Coleman continued his resurgence with 16 points and Jaloni Johnson added 13. Richard Lindsey scored 13 for the Metoers.

Hillcrest 73, Normal 44: The Hawks dominated from start to finish. Quentin Heady led with 18 and point guard Bryce Tillery and big man Darrion Baker each added 17. Hillcrest was impressive. Jaheem Webber, Normal’s highly-regarded prospect, finished with 14.

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