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Chicago Bulls News: Team looking for ‘Boylen friendly’ general manager?on March 11, 2020 at 11:00 am

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Chicago Bulls News: Team looking for ‘Boylen friendly’ general manager?on March 11, 2020 at 11:00 am Read More »

Chicago Bears: Nick Foles trade packages, plus the fallouton March 11, 2020 at 12:00 pm

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Chicago Bears, Nick Foles

Chicago Bears (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

The Chicago Bears should do just about anything to upgrade their quarterback room so that they can take advantage of their elite defense.

The Chicago Bears wasted a season in 2019. They went 8-8 in a year that began with Super Bowl expectations. 8-8 is not an awful record relative to the bottom feeders of the league but for a team with those kinds of expectations, it felt like they went 4-12. They still had an awesome defense but they couldn’t score points to save their lives. A lot of it had to do with the fact that Mitchell Trubisky was a horrible quarterback.

Trubisky had a decent year in the Bears 12-4 season that ended in the playoffs but he took a major step back in 2019. He pretty much made it clear that he isn’t going to be able to lead his team to the Super Bowl. For that reason, the Bears need to pursue someone who can do that. They might not need a guy like Tom Brady, Patrick Mahomes, or Aaron Rodgers to get there but they need a guy who can put up enough points to take advantage of having a great defense.

One guy who could be an option is Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Nick Foles. He is already a quarterback that has proven he can lead his team to the Super Bowl as he was the starting quarterback for the 2017-18 Philadelphia Eagles team that won. If the Bears had a quarterback like him they might be able to get over the hump. The Jaguars have said they will move on to Gardner Minshew II so Foles is probably available to be had.

He has a big contract that might need to be reworked or retained on, but if they could figure out a way to get it to work they should try. These are two trade proposals that might get the deal done along with what the fallout would be:

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Chicago Bears: Nick Foles trade packages, plus the fallouton March 11, 2020 at 12:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Blackhawks: San Jose Sharks are in a similar positionon March 11, 2020 at 1:00 pm

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Chicago Blackhawks: San Jose Sharks are in a similar positionon March 11, 2020 at 1:00 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: TEs to target if team can’t land Hooperon March 11, 2020 at 2:00 pm

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Chicago Bears, Trey Burton

(Photo by Nuccio DiNuzzo/Getty Images) Chicago Bears

The Chicago Bears need to drastically improve at the tight end position this offseason. The team should look at these free-agent tight ends if they miss out on the top prize in free agency.

The Chicago Bears had very little production from their tight ends over the past two seasons. The team signed Trey Burton in the 2018 offseason hoping he’d be the anchor needed to run coach Matt Nagy’s offense. It hasn’t worked out as planned.

Burton dealt with injuries for most of last season and was barely on the field. Backup tight end Adam Shaheen also had some injury problems but was benched during the season for poor play. He very well could be classified as a draft bust.

If you add those two issues together, it makes sense that the Bears dug deep to find help at the position. With guys like Jesper Horsted and Bradley Sowell suiting up at the position, it was clear the Bears needed major help at the position.

Take a look at the two offenses most similar to Nagy’s: the Philadelphia Eagles and the Kansas City Chiefs. Each of those offenses features an elite pass-catching tight end in Zach Ertz and Travis Kelce, respectively.

The Bears need a dynamic player at the position to help other targets get open for quarterback Mitch Trubisky. The top prize in the free-agent market for a tight end this year is Austin Hooper. He also comes with an expectedly high price tag.

Hooper, previously with the Atlanta Falcons, is a hot commodity because of his career-best stats last year (despite missing three games) and the fact that he’s just 25 years old.

When free agency officially begins on Wednesday, March 18th, expect a bidding war for Hooper to ensue. It’s unlikely the Bears will have enough money to make a significant offer to Hooper unless they make more roster moves.

If the Bears don’t land Hooper, there’s still plenty of talent out there at tight end for the team to pursue. Here are the three tight ends the team should go after as a consolation prize if they miss out on Hooper.

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Chicago Bears: TEs to target if team can’t land Hooperon March 11, 2020 at 2:00 pm Read More »

Watch Berkowitz w/R Primary State’s Attorney Candidate O’Brien on the key issues & on Foxx, Conway & more: Cable & Webon March 11, 2020 at 1:28 am

Public Affairs with Jeff Berkowitz

Watch Berkowitz w/R Primary State’s Attorney Candidate O’Brien on the key issues & on Foxx, Conway & more: Cable & Web

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Watch Berkowitz w/R Primary State’s Attorney Candidate O’Brien on the key issues & on Foxx, Conway & more: Cable & Webon March 11, 2020 at 1:28 am Read More »

Movie Review: Onwardon March 11, 2020 at 3:27 am

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Movie Review: Onward

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Movie Review: Onwardon March 11, 2020 at 3:27 am Read More »

Chicago ain’t ready for reform in Her Honor Jane Byrneon March 10, 2020 at 8:55 pm

“This ain’t Walter Lee Younger’s Chicago no more,” declares Black Che (Robert Cornelius), a sort of griot of the housing projects in J. Nicole Brooks’s Her Honor Jane Byrne, now receiving a rich, riotous, and soul-searching world premiere at Lookingglass Theatre. The play focuses specifically on the three weeks in 1981 when Jane Byrne–the first woman elected mayor of a major city in the U.S.–moved to an apartment in Cabrini-Green to highlight the poor living conditions in the projects. But the play’s emotional and moral timeline encompasses so many other elements that, while certainly very different in tone and narrative structure from Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun (set 20 years earlier than the events depicted here), it shares the same through line as Hansberry’s Younger family when it comes to the festering racism that scars this city to its marrow.

Though Christine Mary Dunford plays the title role with an arresting mix of forthrightness, fear, and hubris, this play isn’t really about Byrne. We do get some insight into how the early losses she faced shaped her and stiffened her spine. Byrne’s first husband, William, was a Marine pilot who died in a crash near Glenview in 1959, leaving her a young widow with a toddler daughter. His ghostly presence, played by Josh Odor, shows up in times of trouble for her in the play, and also serves as a noble counterpart to Jay McMullen (Frank Nall), her somewhat-clownish second spouse.

Dunford’s Byrne functions a bit like Tommy Carcetti, the ambitious and putatively reform-minded Baltimore mayor in HBO’s The Wire. And just as that show was slapped with the label “Dickensian,” one is tempted to do the same with Her Honor Jane Byrne, which is stuffed to the gills with powerbrokers, hustlers, and everyday people, trying to figure out how to live together. But Byrne ultimately comes across as more naive than Carcetti-calculating. Was the move to Cabrini a publicity stunt? Sure, but publicity stunts can reap public benefits. The problem, as Brooks anatomizes it here, is that even her mentorship with Richard J. Daley left Byrne unprepared for just how deeply enmeshed the roots of the problems facing her city were.

It’s not just the establishment figures, represented here by glad-handing Charlie Swibel, head of the Chicago Housing Authority, and crooked First Ward alderman Fred Roti (both played with brio by Thomas J. Cox) who get in Byrne’s way. They want things to continue pretty much as they always have. (At one point Cox’s Swibel laments, “I could make this city beautiful if people got out of my way!”) It’s also the residents of Cabrini, who have tons of reasons to distrust the woman who is just the latest politico to seek their votes on thin vows of “this time things will be different.” Marion Stamps (TaRon Patton), a tenants’ rights activist mentored by both Medgar Evers and Black Panther Fred Hampton and deeply scarred by their assassinations, tosses verbal firecrackers at the mayor at a community meeting, reminding her of all the promises unkept and the role that police violence has played in her community–making the increased police presence that accompanies Byrne to Cabrini less than welcome.

Yet as Cornelius’s Che, the most gloriously Dickens-by-way-of-Chicago character onstage, points out to Tracy Walsh’s nameless Reporter, the story in the projects is also “Cain Killed Abel.” Gang violence ruled this turf from its 19th-century days as “Little Hell,” when Irish and Italian immigrants fought for a toehold. (Walsh’s character feels underutilized, though her presence allows Che to go off on some splendid rhetorical flights.) Yet Che also reminds Walsh’s character (who shows up the first time in Cabrini wearing a bulletproof vest under her sweater) that the project is a community–and one that functioned pretty well until white flight kicked in. “Funny how the city works,” he muses. “We all run from each other. Well, they run from us.”

Yu Shibagaki’s set combines the concrete-and-graffiti world of Cabrini with a wall of video monitors on which we see both archival documentary footage and close-ups of the actors. In one particularly moving segment, Tiger (Nicole Michelle Haskins), Che’s niece, is stuck in a broken project elevator, which leads to her losing her job. (Dunford’s Byrne steps in to help her get rehired.) We see only her back to the metal gate facing the stage, but her face, suffused with frustration and rage, fills the monitors. There’s a distinct Brechtian element here as well, with supertitles functioning like chapter headings, such as “Street Tribes, Christians, Liquor Stores, and Lakefront Liberals.”

The entire ensemble, directed by Brooks, makes these characters all larger than life, and yet entirely relatable and human. (Well, other than Nall’s mobster Tony Spilotro, whom Dunford’s Byrne calls in Palm Springs late one night to warn about getting his drugs out of the projects, and who is suitably cold-blooded.) Almost nobody in this story created the conditions they’re dealing with, and though Byrne’s miscalculations around what it takes to fix the problems feel painful, Brooks doesn’t demand that we view her as a cynical woman. Rather, she allows Byrne and everyone else who crosses paths here to be full of life, flawed, and unapologetic.

And though it’s easy to despair at seeing the civic problems in Her Honor Jane Byrne repeat through time, it’s also worth noting that Stamps, 11 years after Byrne’s brief residence, did help negotiate the only citywide (if short-lived) gang truce in Chicago history. Cabrini is gone. Segregation and housing crises remain. But Brooks’s play reminds us that there are still people in this city looking to get into good trouble as they defy history and the odds. v






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What the Constitution Means to Me means a lot for all of uson March 10, 2020 at 9:05 pm

At the very start of What the Constitution Means to Me, author Heidi Schreck (charmingly played here by Maria Dizzia) emphasizes that contrary to the assertions of her debate competitor, the Constitution is not a patchwork quilt. Neither is the play: instead, it’s a tightly woven narrative masquerading as a casual patchwork of personal reminiscences, civics lessons, and feminist observations.

In this it resembles Anton Chekhov’s comic monologue “Smoking is Bad for You,” which purports to be a lecture on the title topic but is in fact the tale of the speaker’s unhappy marriage, frustrated ambitions, and bullying wife. This is relevant because there’s a mention in Constitution of some critics who seem to believe that Schreck’s play isn’t constructed at all, but random, like found poetry or readings from an old diary. That in turn feels like an allusion to the long-held belief that what women do (including quilting!) couldn’t possibly be thoughtful or intentional. But when Schreck takes the arrangement of her work from the master of playwriting structure, it’s beyond dispute that she knows exactly what she’s doing, and why.

So I don’t just love Constitution because it activates my long-dormant lawyer self, nor because it strokes my prejudices, though it certainly does both of those. I love it because it showcases the skill of revealing everything while seeming to talk about nothing in particular. The show, a whole world contained in a drop of water, is ostensibly a recreation of the author’s experiences as a 15-year-old earning college tuition by participating in American Legion speech tournaments on the title topic.

Along the way, we learn about Heidi’s mother and grandmother and great-great-grandmother, about the 19th-century American west practice of purchasing brides from Europe, about domestic violence and sexual abuse and rape, and about Amendments Nine and Fourteen. And at the end, the still-energetic Dizzia engages in a debate with a 15-year-old competitive debater (the earnest Jocelyn Shek at the performance I saw, alternating with Rosdely Ciprian) about whether it’s worth trying to save the document at all. It is the platonic ideal performance for this administration, this year, this week, in which the last serious woman presidential candidate had to drop out because none of the misogyny described here has disappeared.

The two women are ably complemented by Mike Iveson, playing the chief of the American Legion Post and, for much of the show, seated silently on the stage as a representative of all men, and all male power, in the world. It’s a tribute to the actor’s likability (that word!) that he manages to do this without making every woman in the audience want to kill him.

Constitution (presented in a touring production with Broadway in Chicago, directed by Oliver Butler) is funny as well as sobering, and includes the best-handled audience participation segment ever. The finest moment came when, asked about her vision for herself in 30 years, Jocelyn said, “I’ll be president,” and a man shouted from the audience, “I hope not the first one!” though he might have meant woman, Asian, or both. You could feel the whole audience smile.

Somehow, the COVID-19 epidemic seems much too spot-on a metaphor for where we are as a society right now. Avoid other people, fear them, make sure you don’t touch them; isolate yourself. That’s been the message coming from the White House for three years and 53 days (but who’s counting?). Going to see What the Constitution Means to Me–in fact, going to any theater, or concert, or art exhibit, or postcard party, or rally, or polling place–is the best answer to that atomizing message. That’s what the Constitution means to me. v






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Idle Muse’s In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play) amuses, but falls shorton March 10, 2020 at 9:20 pm

Imagine Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s short story “The Yellow Wallpaper” crossed with a sex-positivity workshop and you’ve got the outlines for Sarah Ruhl’s 2009 In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play), now in a revival with Idle Muse Theatre Company under Morgan Manasa’s direction. Catherine Givings (Kristen Alesia), a young doctor’s wife in a New York “spa town” circa the 1880s, wonders what her husband (Joel Thompson) is doing with all those neurasthenic female patients who make interesting noises behind the door. Turns out, he’s using an early version of a vibrator on them to release the “excess fluid” in their wombs and thus reduce their “hysteria.” (SCIENCE!) But Catherine has her own anxieties as a young mother, exacerbated by having to hire a wet nurse, Elizabeth (Michelle R. Bester), to help feed her daughter.

Now toss in a nascent lesbian attraction between Sabrina (Christina Renee Jones), one of Dr. Givings’s patients, and his assistant, Annie (Erin Gallagher)–a woman as skilled with ancient Greek as gynecology–and Catherine’s growing fascination with Leo (Chad Bay), her husband’s lone male hysteric patient (an artist, naturally). You’ve got the makings for a Victorian sex romp.

But Ruhl takes the story in surprising directions that go against the grain of the surface narrative about sexual repression and desire. Opening night, the actors struggled at times to make those connections. Alesia has bright-eyed vivacity, but starts at a high pitch and doesn’t leave herself a lot of room to grow emotionally as the story demands. However, Bester’s Elizabeth–a Black woman mourning the loss of her own child while nursing an idle white woman’s baby–brings in a steadying sobriety that grounds us in class-based reality. Overall, it’s an amusing production that doesn’t quite reach a satisfying climax. v






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Idle Muse’s In the Next Room (or The Vibrator Play) amuses, but falls shorton March 10, 2020 at 9:20 pm Read More »

Judy and Liza–Once in a Lifetime shows the bond between two divason March 10, 2020 at 9:30 pm

This cabaret by singer-actors Nancy Hays and Alexa Castelvecchi pays homage to two of the greatest performers of the 20th century: Judy Garland and her daughter Liza Minnelli, who teamed up in November 1964 for a pair of concerts at the historic London Palladium, one of which was televised. At the time, Judy was a 42-year-old veteran of movies, TV, and vaudeville, while Minnelli was an 18-year-old fledgling on the brink of a promising career. Accompanied by a trio led by pianist Robert Ollis, Hays and Castelvecchi don’t try to imitate Garland and Minnelli; instead, through song and storytelling, they share their own perspectives on the stars’ enduring influence on them as artists in their own right.

Hays is a fine singer who shines in more reflective moments–her introspective rendition of “Over the Rainbow” is genuinely touching. And Castelvecchi is a dynamic belter and comic whose knockout rendition of the standard “Who’s Sorry Now?” is a first-act highlight; even more gripping is her second-act rendition of “Quiet Please, There’s a Lady Onstage,” the song that Minnelli’s onetime husband Peter Allen wrote in Garland’s memory following her 1969 death from an accidental overdose of barbiturates. The show’s best moments are the duet medleys, in which Hays and Castelvecchi evoke the deep and honest affection that bonded mother and daughter in both triumphant and trying times. v






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Judy and Liza–Once in a Lifetime shows the bond between two divason March 10, 2020 at 9:30 pm Read More »