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The Chicago Blog

Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

June 17th, 2011
By: Srdan Latinovic
Staff Writer
srdan.latinovic@chicago.com

If you’re looking for a different kind of a festival this coming weekend think about Turtle’s 1st Annual Street Festival as an alternative to The Peace Fest, The Taste of Randolph Street or the Wrigleyville Block Party.

Here is some info on Turtle’s 1st Annual Street Festival:

WHEN: Saturday June 18th

WHAT: Come stop by for a drink or something off the grill.

Bag tournament @ 3:00 with cash prizes. Sign up is earlier that day. Teams will be picked right before the tournament.

Live music @ 5:00. Pig and lamb roast, too.

WHERE: In the Bridgeport neighborhood

238 W 33rd St
(between Wells St & Prairie Ave)
Chicago, IL 60616
(312) 225-7333
Turtle's Bar and Grill.
Can’t beat a great day outside in the summertime!!!!!!! This is a fun event for people of all ages!


January 11th, 2011
By: Katie Fraser
Staff Writer
katie.fraser@chicago.com
http://www.katiefraser.webs.com

If the lines into the Stage 773 theatre were any measure of the show about to begin, the 10th Annual Chicago Comedy Festival would be worth the wait. And it was.

The festival opened Thursday, Jan. 6 and ran through Sunday, and will continue on the next weekend as well. The shows I attended were on Saturday evening, Space Chocolate at 6 p.m. and The Cool Table at 7 p.m. These were just two of the 18 shows playing that evening. Each night there are multiple shows going on at once as Stage 773 houses three diffrent stages. There are different starting times every evening, i.e. 8p.m. Thursday, 7p.m. Friday, but each show runs one hour and starts on the hour. It continues this way until the last show gets out at midnight. The three stages inside Stage 773 allow shows to go on simultaneously, allowing patrons to view all the acts without ever leaving the building.

I arrived a few minutes before the first show to make sure I got a good seat. As I entered the venue, I was pleasently surprised. The box office was located in to the right of the entrance, far enough away to allow the lines to get long without blocking the doors. The lobby was spacious, large enough to leave room for a full service bar. It did get crowded as the evening went on, but those running the show clearly had anticipated large crowds and directred traffic well.

Stage 773 was also incredibly easy to get to. Whether one is traveling by train, bus, car or walking, it was easy to locate and get into. It was just a few blocks down Belmont also allowing for a wide selection of restaurants and bars for those looking to make it a full evening. There is even a 4 a.m. bar, Big City Tap, close by for those who stay for all the shows. Stage 773 is also right down the street from the Bailiwick Theatre, which was redone over the last year.

Before going in to watch Space Chocolate perform, I go to see Chicago Sketch Comedy Festival management team at work. As it got crowded they did a great job of keeping lines moving and getting people in and out of the theatres quickly. For new comers things were clearly marked like where to go if one was paying for cash and how to obtain a wrist band for the bar. I especially enjoyed the Master of Ceremonies, as I liked to call him. In the left hand corner of the lobby there was a deck built and a man sat in this balcony before each show. Once the shows began he blew his horn and announced the theatre’s opening. It built excitement as everyone scurried to get a seat.

Space Chocolate performed in the North theatre at 6p.m. The group was made up of two men and featured another troupe, Man On the Ledge. Space Chocolate started out with a sketch about a woman getting stood up at a Swedish restaurant. The waiter had a Swedish accent and all the food had “funny” Swedish names. At the end of the sketch when the woman asked the waiter to join him, he turns out to be American. The sketches continued to be of this sort of caliber. The humor was predictable and stale. Often they went for the cheap laugh by making racial jokes or using physical comedy. Both men had stage presence and had clearly performed before, but they lacked comedic timing. Also they didn’t work well as a team. One man clearly was a stage hog, something I find to be extremely annoying. Man On A Ledge, however, brightened up the show a bit. While they weren’t leaving me in tears, they did have good comedic timing. They worked well together as a group and seemed to know each group members strengths well. Their sketches also had a bit more creativity and they used more socially relevant material. I especially enjoyed one in which the two girls in the group of six were radio DJ’s at a jazz station. All in all the performance left me a little weary about the rest of the evening.

Then The Cool Table happened.

The Cool Table began at 7p.m. in the west theatre. Within the first minute I was crying from laughter. Sketch after sketch they never fell flat. Their vocal inflections, comedic timing and physicality were flawless, creating a show where only mere seconds went by before the crowd was laughing again. Their humor was a nice mix of silly and adult. They incorporated buzzworthy medium, like Glee, into their writing, but also used classic topics, like cross-dressing, with new twists. For example, their performance included a the classic break up sketch, where the break up-er says “It’s not you, it’s everything about you.”, only this time the break up happened between male friends. Just one example of how they used the buzzworthy “bromance” in conjunction with the classic break up theme. The shining star of the evening, however, were the two ladies. They were the voice over to a mediation tape in which they took the audience on a journey throughout the body as nomads, rapped about lady parts and cereal and one stole the show when she sang about her cross-dressing. I laughed so hard, I cried.

The festival was clearly a hit, not just based on my opinion but based on the sheer number of people that came out to see the show. Brian Posen, the creator of the festival, has done a great job organizing the event, expanding the number of groups and gaining community support. It shows in the number of returning guests and through the performers, as both groups gave a shot out to him at the end of their shows. I urge everyone and anyone who has a couple extra bucks and enjoys shows like It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia or SNL then the Chicago Sketch Comedy Festival will deliver. I know I will be going back.


October 30th, 2010
By: Jarred Trost
Lead Developer
jarred@chicago.com
http://www.chicago.com

How Chicago Ruined The Rally For Sanity

This morning I attended the Rally to Restore Sanity satellite viewing in Grant Park, which was organized by Angie McMahon. When I first walked in I was excited and anxious, but I left an hour later disappointed and upset. What went wrong in that hour? Maybe it was when the live feed from DC was muted so a comedian could compare having an abortion to making a sandwich. Maybe it was when a security guard grabbed the microphone and cursed at the crowd because they were upset over not being able to watch the rally. Maybe it was when speaker after speaker did nothing but shout liberal rhetoric at us (Full disclosure: I consider myself to be liberal). Maybe it was the guy who dressed up in a KKK outfit, which was the complete opposite message of the rally.

Actually, I take that last one back. I honestly don’t know what the message of the Rally To Restore Sanity was because we were not allowed to watch it! And I’m not the only one upset by this. I think this collection of quotes from other Chicagoans attending Angie’s event tells the story of what happened quite well.


I came to enjoy the spirit of the DC rally with thousands of like-minded people. Had the scheduled speakers embodied that spirit and respected the DC rally, I don’t think I would have complained.
-Erik Robertson (Facebook)


Astounded that [the organizers] collected funds only to refuse to broadcast the rally & use [the] forum for their own purposes. Unethical.
-frageelay (Twitter)


Angie is awesome, but we’re missing a one of a kind gig from our best satirists in DC to hear Yiddish jokes and liberal talk.
-Brad Flora (Windy Citizen)


[The organizer] needs to apologize not only to the people who came out and gave support and money, but also to the organizers of the DC Rally… because what they were organizing against was PRECISELY what the Chicago rally turned into… partisan hackery and pandering. And the pandering wasn’t even funny.
-William Taplin III (Facebook)


This was a complete disaster. The amount of cognitive dissonance on display from the event organizers was staggering. They interrupted an event to restore sanity to interject their own bullshit about FBI plots to kidnap anti-war protesters. They co-opted an event organized to reduce the amount of extremism in American politics in order to shout their own extremist position. It was a total failure, and I am ashamed to say I was there.
-InvisibleCities (Reddit)


I saw that it was clearly a political rally with a specific agenda and posted that yesterday. I guess I was fooled by the use of the name, similar logo (buyer beware of unsanctioned merchandise), and the excitement of all the other poor sheep who were so unwittingly led too. My bad.
-Tamara Swanson (Facebook)


They promoted this as a Stewart/Colbert event, yet if we wanted to watch them we should have stayed home? I’m fine with them having local speakers, but don’t interrupt what we came here to see. They should have had the speakers later.
-chaosdude78 (Reddit)


I left [the rally] because it was a tacky bait and switch. I came to Grant Park because i couldn’t make it to DC.
-Keidra Chanley (Twitter)


[I] left [the rally] early. I think people would’ve been more understanding if they weren’t bitched out with F-bombs by the organizer.
-Lisa Stangland (Twitter)


Well [the rally organizer], you were not exactly what I’d hoped. But the best way to resolve disappointment? Chipotle. This day is certainly redeemable.
-Heather Jo Douglas (Twitter)


*Some quotes from Twitter have been altered for grammar and clarity

In summary, Angie mcMahon organized an event under the pretense that we would be watching and celebrating Jon Stewart’s message. She raised over $21,000 (full disclosure: I donated to this) to put on this event. Then the event turned out to be nothing more than a liberal version of a tea party.

The one good thing to come out of this disaster is that the money she raised will go to Chicago Public Schools. But that’s the only thing she should be proud of. Everything regarding the execution of this event was a complete disaster.

One last thing to fully disclose: Angie often retweeted me when I plugged her event on Twitter. Now I wonder if she will retweet some constructive criticism of her event.


September 24th, 2010
By: Srdan Latinovic
Staff Writer
srdan.latinovic@chicago.com

How many exhibits in the world allow a person to get a closer view at something we all grew up watching as kids and followed even into our adulthood? Only one that I know of and it is currently being displayed at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago – Jim Henson’s Fantastic World.

Jim Henson’s Fantastic World is an exhibit organized by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service  chronicling the life of the great Jim Henson, that includes over 130 cartoons, drawings and storyboards. The exhibit is one big puppet party, where Jim Henson explains to the visitor either through text or audio how much puppetry meant to him, and how he came up with this two greatest inventions – Sesame Street and the Muppet Show.

Upon entering the MSI exhibit a visitor is greeted by Henson’s most famous of inventions – Kermit The Frog. The green icon is proudly displayed at the entrance in all its glory along with numerous photos of Henson and Kermit throughout the years they spent “working” together. In the same room there is a chronological display of Jim Henson’s life in the industry, all the magnificent things he accomplished in his life.

Hensons most famous of creations - Kermit The Frog
Hensons most famous of creations – Kermit The Frog

Once inside the exhibit, the walls are full of all the Henson-abilia, pictures of him and the puppets along with numerous drawings and sketches from his earlier days. As a fan of both Sesame Street and The Muppet Show, I enjoyed those drawings and sketches more than any picture because it gave me an insight into how things worked – something I didn’t know and or cared about when I was a youngster. I always thought it was all fun and games being on the set of the Muppet Show but being at the exhibit showed me it was a lot of years of hard work and determination.

Along with Kermit being displayed in a glass box there is also Miss Piggy in all her majesty wearing a white wedding dress, which she wore in the movie “The Muppets Take Manhattan.” Miss Piggy doesn’t make appearances with this exhibit but she agreed to be displayed in Chicago when MSI asked for her services. While she doesn’t have any direct ties to Henson (he neither designed or performed as her) the exhibit would not have been complete without Miss Piggy, who aside from Kermit is easily the most recognizable of all the puppets.

Miss Piggy in her wedding dress from the movie The Muppets Take Manhattan
Miss Piggy in her wedding dress from the movie The Muppets Take Manhattan

Inside the exhibit there are two separate rooms designed to encourage audience participation: a theater room – where visitors can literally play the role of Henson and perform with the puppets laid out in a box nearby; and a create a character wall – a wall that allows people to create their own puppet using Velcro-like material.

The latter has an outline of a puppet body attached to the wall, while all the clothes are removable along with a variety of hats, beards, sunglasses giving the audience a variety of ways to dress his/her own puppet. Both of these rooms require audience participation and should be a huge draw for all those who come and check out the exhibit.

More than anything else, the exhibit portrays the way Jim Henson viewed things, visually. The exhibit and in particular drawings and sketches portray how Henson would store so many of his ideas in his brain only for them to appear live and in costume at a later part in his magnificent career.

Bert and Ernie in all their glory
Bert and Ernie in all their glory

Bonnie Erickson, president of the Jim Henson Legacy Foundation and the original builder of Miss Piggy, hopes that those who come out and see the exhibit will learn to follow their dreams as well.

“I hope that this exhibit will inspire anyone who doesn’t know what to do with themselves to follow their dreams,” Erickson said. “Any one of us can and should follow our heart just the way Jim did.”

From left to right: Jennifer Schommer, Frederica Adelman, Bonnie Erickson and Karen Falk pose next to Kermit
From left to right: Jennifer Schommer, Frederica Adelman, Bonnie Erickson and Karen Falk pose next to Kermit

Jim’s love for his work and the puppets he created is visible in every one of the exhibit’s pictures and one has to wonder if the rest of us are lucky enough to have our work be our passion in life.

It certainly was just that for him.

Jim Henson surrounded by his favorite cast of characters
Jim Henson surrounded by his favorite cast of characters

September 10th, 2010
By: Srdan Latinovic
Staff Writer
srdan.latinovic@chicago.com

Friday and Saturday lineups at the North Coast Music Festival were great and a huge number of people came out to see the likes of Chemical Brothers, De La Soul, Paul Van Dyk and Moby among others. Those that came out to see those acts didn’t regret it all and spoke highly of all the music performances.

I was lucky enough to be at the festival on Sunday night and catch the performances by Chicago’s own Lupe Fiasco, followed by the duo of Nas and Damian Marley.

Going into this festival I knew it would be large in size (location: Union Park, West Side) , as well as the following due to the names appearing at the festival. The fact that it was the last big festival of the summer made the event even bigger, since people wanted to use that last weekend for something useful.

Arriving at the festival, the first thing that struck me was the impossible task of finding a parking spot somewhere close to the actual fest. I expected parking to be difficult because of the musical acts appearing that night but I didn’t anticipate parking a “mile” away from Union Park.

Regardless, once inside the festival the whole atmosphere reminded me a bit of Lollapalooza in the way everything was set up. Stages were not all that far from one another but just the right distance apart, as to not interfere with each others performances. The food vendors were at a safe distance from the actual stages, so if one wanted a hot dog or a beer you were most likely going to lose your spot in front of the stage.

I arrived just in time to catch the whole performance by Lupe Fiasco and that was certainly a major pick-me-up for the entire crowd. Fiasco definitely puts on a show and the entire crowd appreciated his energetic display, along with his hit songs “Kick, Push” and “Superstar.” I was there with my girlfriend and while I enjoy listening to Lupe Fiasco, she likes him more and she truly enjoyed the performance from start to finish.

After Lupe concluded his impressive performance, it was time for Nas & Damian Marley to entertain the crowds. I was looking for this performance more so than Lupe Fiasco, mainly because I am slightly older than majority of the crowd and I listened to Nas way back in the day. At this point and time it was around 8:30 and the dark of the night had completely set over Union Park.

Nas & Damian Marley did not disappoint. They started the show with Nas’ classic single “If I ruled the world” featuring Lauryn Hill, with Damian being kind enough and subbing in for the multiple Grammy Award winning singer. Starting off with that song was an absolute hit as the entire crowd got into it and sang along. From that point on the two alternated songs and helped out one another as they performed for a good hour and a half.

Their performance was truly amazing and the entire crowd sang along and held up lighters to all the classic Damian Marley songs. The duo was most definitely the right choice for the final performance of the festival, a festival that certainly looked like a complete success after it is all said and done.

The only downside to the event was the lines for the beer tickets as they easily exceeded 30-40 yards. The food lines were way shorter and I was impressed with the variety that they had to offer for an outdoor music festival. Sure one could get the usual burgers, hot dogs and pizza but the event also offered salads, kebobs and Thai food…something not always seen at a music fest.

Overall, the festival pleasantly surprised me in the way it was organized, as well the numerous culinary options available to the crowd. The music was well worth going to the fest and whether you liked techno, rap, reggae or even alternative, there was something there for everyone. This was a great festival for anyone in the mood for good music and a great way to say goodbye (unfortunately) to the summer, as we “welcome” fall/winter to Chicago yet again.


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