A rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle doesn’t usually mean hitting the hay early on Saturday nights, but it would be a wise decision for those running in this Sunday’s Rock ’n’ Roll Half Marathon, which starts at 6:30am. If you’re there to support a friend or enjoy the music, well then, don’t think twice, it’s all right to stay up late, just as long as you wake up early, too—the post-race concert in Grant Park is free and open to all, and begins at 7:30am with opening act Hello Dave, followed by the main act Five for Fighting. The Rock ’n‘ Roll Half Marathon features live Chicago bands for each of its 13.1 miles, which cover downtown Chicago and the lakefront. It won’t be a monotonous run, with music ranging from classic rock ‘n’ roll to blues, jazz, folk music and even Irish bagpipers. Adding live music, says event manager Shaba Mohseni, brings “a whole new meaning to doing a running race.” Last year’s debut event (they bought out the long-established Chicago Distance Classic) sold out with 18,000 runners, and this year’s race is sold out as well, despite adding 7,000 more slots. Last year, Marty Mardirosian’s daughter ran the half-marathon, and he cheered her on. Mardirosian says watching his daughter run, and the title of the race, got him interested in playing—Mardirosian’s band, M&R Rush, had a hit song the summer of 1980—“Rock ‘n’ Roll Chicago.” Now Mardirosian will be motivating thousands of runners around the nine-mile mark with covers and original music. Needless to say, you can leave your mp3 player at home for this run. (Ella Christoph)
The folks at the Active Transportation Alliance hope you won’t be needing their new Crash Support Hotline at (312)869-HELP(4357), but should disaster, well, strike, help is just a phone call away. For years, Active Trans has been providing counsel to Chicago area cyclists (and pedestrians) in trouble. This month, however, marks the launch of a hotline designated for just that purpose. Within twenty-four hours, a trained volunteer will get back to you with attorney referrals, advice and a listening ear—the bike-savvy mom you never had.
Still in its infancy, the hotline is currently manned by a single staffer. “Once we have an idea of the call volume and what kind of questions people are calling with,” says Margo O’Hara, Active Trans Director of Communications, the goal is for the hotline to be staffed by a rotating brigade of volunteers—all of them well-versed in the ins and outs of mobile disasters.
Yet while the volunteers will be trained in issues emotional, legal and logistical, O’Hara is careful to stress that the hotline is the second number you should call. “The hotline doesn’t replace 911 in any way,” she says. “If people have been in a crash, they should call 911. If you haven’t called 911, call 911, and be sure to get a police report. Once you’re able to do that, call us, and we’ll go from there.” (Rachel Sugar)
Chicago Hype Exchange: Charting the Capricious Contours of Celebrity
Chicago Hype Exchange No Comments »This Week’s Biggest Gainers:
1 Andre Dawson
Hall of Fame induction reminded Cubs fans of extremely short list of team highlights these past hundred years.
2 Lou Piniella
By quitting before the axe fell, Sweet Lou’s retirement announcement even kicked up some Hall of Fame chatter. Read the rest of this entry »
By Rob Brezsny
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Success coach Tom Ferry says our ability to pursue our dreams can be damaged by four addictions: 1. an addiction to what other people think of us; 2. an addiction to creating melodrama in a misguided quest for excitement; 3. an addiction to believing we’re imprisoned by what happened in the past; 4. an addiction to negative thoughts that fill us with anxiety. The good news, Aries, is that in the coming weeks you will find it easier than usual to free yourself from addictions 1, 3 and 4. On the other hand, you may be extra susceptible to addiction 2. So take action to make sure you don’t fall victim to it! What can you do to avoid distracting adventures and trivial brouhahas? Read the rest of this entry »
A River Runs, um, Near It: Chicago Fly Fishing Outfitters courts those who have been called
Lincoln Park, Sports No Comments »Chicago Fly Fishing Outfitters’ walls are covered in fluorescent green rabbit fur, feathers and glittery silver tinsel—these materials used for fly tying seem like decorations for a drag queen’s dream supply store. A corner of the shop is dedicated to fishing poles, which line the walls like pool cues. Wading jackets, Merino wool socks and general apparel occupy a room of their own. But this store does not lie next to one of Chicago’s rivers or even the lake—the store sits at 1279 North Clybourn, just a few blocks away from the remains of Cabrini Green.
Andy Kurkulis, the owner of Chicago Fly Fishing Outfitters, is very much aware of the store’s unconventional location. “It’s a very unique store,” he says, “It’s different than most of them out there in Chicago. We don’t have a big famous river or beach where we fish but we have two great airports. So we pretty much travel everywhere and fish for everything.” Read the rest of this entry »
Architecture Capital? What we’ll lose if we lose our mid-century modern buildings
Architecture, Chicago History 5 Comments »By Ella Christoph
If archaeologists wanted to excavate Chicago to discover its history, they would quickly realize digging down is far less productive than just opening your eyes and looking at the panorama of a city block. The sediment of Chicago reaches left and right, not down, and it’s by noticing one building next to another that Chicago’s turbulent history jumps out at us. The city is a jumble of homes, storefronts and skyscrapers that bring us back to before the Great Chicago Fire, back to the golden age of railroads, back to the time when internationally acclaimed architects fled Europe for the safety and capitalist progressivism of the Second City.
For archaeologists in Pompeii, the volcano was a gold mine, freezing the city in time. But imagine a different kind of destructive force, with the accuracy of a pencil eraser, deleting just one moment of a city’s past at a time. A bulldozer, tearing down what we believe future generations won’t miss—the now-ubiquitous square glass boxes of Mies van der Rohe’s protégés, the harsh concrete of Brutalism, the strange contraptions of architects excited by new materials that became ordinary almost instantaneously. This isn’t a new eraser; its sights are just set on a new comma in the paragraph of our city’s history. Read the rest of this entry »
You Killed the Car: The Rose House is both mid-century modern landmark and a bit of pop-culture history
Architecture, Chicago History, Highland Park No Comments »
In the late eighties and early nineties, hip, affluent trendsetters rediscovered the aesthetic of mid-century modern homes and flocked to Palm Springs in search of homes designed by Albert Frey, Richard Neutra and their peers. It was a godsend for the homes, which were “somewhat disheveled-looking, and worn out,” says Joseph Rosa, director of the University of Michigan’s Museum of Art. Read the rest of this entry »
An iPad and a handful of iPhone 4s sit on the table at the Argo Tea at Dearborn and Adams at 8:30 in the morning. Their owners are gathered around the table, and even while they talk to each other, their devices are hard at work. Pek Pongpaet’s iPad shows off an app he created, a database of inspirational business quotes. Bruno Pieroni’s iPhone snaps a picture of a bar code on a pack of gum and instantaneously he knows what store will give him the best price. I take a photo of Erin Borreson’s business card with my iPhone and, suddenly, I’m directed to her website. It’s not an Apple gathering, it’s likemind, a monthly meetup on the third Friday of the month for people interested in creativity and technology. You don’t actually have to be an Apple devotee to attend, but be prepared to defend your smartphone of choice. Some people come to trade business cards, while others just want to hear what new innovations creative techies are excited about. “There’s no set rules. There’s no set agenda,” says Mike Maddaloni, who helps coordinate the events. Allison Hosack, a leadership development consultant who also does personal training, laughs as she looks at her phone. “He’s a quick little sucker, ain’t he. I already got a LinkedIn request from Pek.” She looks at the QR code on Erin’s business card that sent me to Erin’s website. “You want to barter personal training for cards?” (Ella Christoph)
Chuck Mutscheller says when he was in college at a small liberal arts school in Minnesota, he paddled to and from his classes. Mutscheller is the communications director for Openlands, a nonprofit that advocates for the conservation of natural and open spaces, and while he doesn’t paddle to work nowadays, he says it’s still easy to get out on the water, even in the big city. Openlands’ Paddle-A-Trail event, which started in June and continues through Labor Day, makes paddling accessible and fun for oldtimers like Mutscheller as well as newbies by encouraging paddlers to contribute to its online WaterLog database. The database allows paddlers to share the upsides, downsides, and upside-downsides of their kayaking and canoeing outings in the Chicago area. Openlands hopes sharing information about log jams and water levels as well as water trails and rental stores will improve the paddling experience and remind Chicagoans they can find nature in the waterways they drive over every day. “It’s a pretty unique experience in that when you’re on the water, even though you’re in the midst of a busy metropolitan region, it’s quiet,” says Mutscheller. “What it really lacks is the din of everyday life.” (Ella Christoph)
Knocked Off his Perch: Jumbo Jimmy just wants to keep fishing
News etc., Politics, Sports No Comments »I’m in search of fishermen as I walk along the lakefront in the early morning, watching the blue-gold waves echo the light breeze that would disappear as the sun rose higher. I want to discover the hidden stories behind the men who wake up at two in the morning to get to the lake by four, as attracted to the peace and cool of the late-night-early-morning lake as the fish they catch.
I see just one fishing pole hanging out of the back of a bike next to a sign that reveals I am a day, not just a few hours, too late for the fishermen. “Governor Quinn,” it reads, “Take July perch closure down! No perch, no vote! Teens can’t perch fish in July. 16, 17, 18. But they can shoot. Signed by: Fellowship of Fishing Club.”
“Jumbo Jimmy” Baczek sits on a bench by his bike proselytizing to passersby. “I woke up this morning at two o’clock, can’t go perch fishing, got pissed off, and made myself a sign,” he says. Read the rest of this entry »







