The folks at Improv Everywhere were back at it yesterday with another edition of their nation-wide No Pants subway ride. And despite the cold, Chicago got in on the act. Enjoy the above photos (via Flickr user Taekwonweirdo) and the below video.
Improv Everywhere's No Pants Train Fun Rides Again
Improv Everywhere's 8th Annual No Pants! Subway Ride This Saturday
This Saturday marks New York City-based Improv Everywhere's 8th Annual No Pants! Subway Ride - part prank, part social experiment where participants gather to ride the subway, sans pants, with straight faces. People from around the globe have been encouraged to organize their own pants-free public transportation ride and lucky for us, it's on. The fun starts at the Granville CTA Red line station (1119 West Granville Avenue) this Saturday at High Noon.
No Pants 2K8!
No Pants 2K8, a no-slacks spectacle that was started by the New York-based performance comedy group, Improv Everywhere, is upon us, and you know what that means: Drop trou, pronto!
Not Doomsday-Related, We Promise!
We know you may be CTA-ed out, but we wanted to remind you about the expiration dates on Chicago cards so you aren't caught with your pants down. Why? Because the Summer of No Pants is over! Nearly 10,000 cards that some of you have held in your hot little hands for four years are set to expire October 17. The upside is that existing balances can be transferred to new cards, issued free of...
Chhhyeahah, it's Gay, Gay as in FUN
With summer easing onto its laurels and panting in the heat, it's easy to get into a mindset that all the fun the season brings to Chicago is over. Not so! While the rest of the city is waiting for the humidity to give way to fall, you could squeeze in some more entertainment, in the form of Queerfest Midwest. The event, from noon to 10pm on Saturday at the Pulaski Fieldhouse in Wicker Park,...
Turkey Fest to Keep Its Balls, Turkeys to Continue to Lose Theirs
Good news out of Fort Myers, Fla. this morning: the town’s annual Turkey Testicle Festival will be allowed to keep its name. And they just may have an Illinois town to thank for it.

