Entries from Chicagoist tagged with 'poverty>'
January 10, 2008
More bad news for and from the Sun-Times: business editor Dan Miller, a 2006 inductee into the Chicago Journalism Hall of Fame, resigned today as seven non-union employees were laid off, including editorial board members Michelle Stevens, Lloyd Sachs and Michael Gillis, and Assistant Managing Editor Avis Weathersbee. Miller wrote in an email that he thinks the Sun-Times will be sold in a matter of months. [Crain's, Trib] You can own a piece of......
Continue Reading "Extra, Extra"August 14, 2007
From a public relations standpoint this has not been a banner couple weeks for the Chicago Police Department. First, the Reverend Al Sharpton opens a Chicago office for his National Action Network in order to address the issue of police brutality in Chicago. Days after Sharpton opened his office, 42-year-old Gefery Johnson died from injuries sustained after police Tasered and forcibly arrested him. Days after that, 18-year-old Aaron Harrison was shot to death by police......
Continue Reading "Is it Any Wonder Why Cynicism Rules?"July 31, 2007
One of Chicago's newest aldermen, Bob Fioretti (2nd) is taking heat from one of the city's older hotels. The 14-story Congress Plaza Hotel, designed and built to accommodate visitors to the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, has been embroiled in a strike with UNITE HERE Local 1 since June 2003. According to Crain's Chicago Business, the hotel, owned by Albert Nasser Shayo, a Syrian globe-trotting businessman with residences in New York, Argentina, and Switzerland, who......
Continue Reading "Congress Strikes Back"July 30, 2007
Winner of a special prize at the Berlin Film Festival, #12 on Metacritic's All-Time High Scores and one of the first 50 films chosen for preservation in the National Film Registry, Killer of Sheep has always been a film more talked about than seen. Until now. This week you'll probably be hearing a lot more about it, because twenty years after it was finished it's finally getting a release; it opens Friday at the Music......
Continue Reading "The Best Movie You've Never Seen"July 19, 2007
Back in the early ‘60s, a two-mile strip of low-income housing was completed on State between Pershing and 54th. That strip of 28 high-rises, dubbed the Robert Taylor Homes, would develop over the years into one of the most infamous housing projects of the city, if not the nation. Amid all the sensational stories of the violence, drug-dealing and poverty that surrounded the area, residents insisted the Taylor Homes were not the cesspool many believed......
Continue Reading "Notorious B.U.S."June 15, 2007
In the marathon that this presidential political season is becoming, presidential hopeful and former North Carolina Senator John Edwards made a pair of brief campaign stops in Chicago Wednesday, just one day before Barack Obama made a campaign stop in North Carolina. At BB's bar and restaurant on Hubbard, part of his "Small Change for Big Change" series of fundraisers, Edwards told the crowd, who had paid between $15 and $100 a head to hear......
Continue Reading "To the Finish Line"June 13, 2007
In typical short-sighted manner, Mayor Daley lashed out at graffiti artists and their parents yesterday. "Who should be responsible, the building owner?" Daley asked the press. "The building owner should sue them." While Hizzoner has had some success battling graffiti as a quality-of-life issue here in the city, Chicago is gearing up for a projected increase in vandalism, anticipating some 170,000 incidents of graffiti vandalism this year. In response, Daley has proposed an ordinance, at......
Continue Reading "Daley Wants to Charge for Anti-Graffiti Efforts"April 29, 2007
Outside.in, the aggregator of all things in neighborhoods across the country, recently tallied their numbers of neighborhood specific blogging and released the top 10 "bloggiest" neighborhoods in the country. Coming in at number 5 was Rogers Park/North Howard. Outside.in describes the neighborhood as, "Located in one of the last remaining pockets of poverty in Chicago's North Side, it‘s home to a culturally diverse group of residents that have very mixed feelings about the rapid gentrification."......
Continue Reading "Bloggiest Hoods in the Country"April 11, 2007
Not everyone has the resources, time, pennies, bonds or forethought to plan at least eighteen years ahead when their baby is born. That's why we think it rocks that good people up top are working toward establish savings accounts for every baby born in Illinois. The Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law is a part of a statewide coalition pushing for state lawmakers to help create a task force that would look into establishing......
Continue Reading "Now That's a Good Idea!"April 5, 2007
Chicagoist is a big fan of channeling our inspirations into our creative output, so we’re naturally drawn to the British Invasion — worshipping Locksley. Named for Robin of Locksley from Robin Hood, one has to expect and accept a certain amount of best-intended robbery. Fortunately, this fab foursome from Madison (by way of Brooklyn) has the gumption and showmanship to pull off the rip off with more than a bit of style and an......
Continue Reading "Leaders of the Brit Pack"March 29, 2007
One of our favorite writers, Dawn Powell, once wrote, "Satire is people as they are; romanticism, people as they would like to be; realism, people as they seem with their insides left out." This explains why the documentaries of Frederick Wiseman, some of which are screening at the Chicago International Documentary Festival starting this weekend, often feel so scathing. They show people as they are, not how we usually see them, and in doing so......
Continue Reading "As We Are"January 15, 2007
It would be easy to write the obligatory piece about "the man and the dream" today. The fact of the matter is that the legacy of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is so much more than just the speech he give at the Lincoln Memorial in 1963 in Washington, DC. Although he is remembered in the US as one of the leaders, if not the leader, of the civil rights movement in the 1950's......
Continue Reading "We Shall Overcome"December 19, 2006
A few brave soldiers in the "War Against Christmas"(tm) have been stealing Baby Jesuses (or is it "Jesi"?) around Chicago's Clearing Garfield Ridge neighborhood. Thirty-two replicas of the immaculately-conceived child (the Jewish carpenter kid, not the annoying Skywalker kid) were forcably kidnapped from owners' front lawns and were rudely deposited this morning at St. Symphorosa Church. People were not amused: "You put things out and it's to express your beliefs, to celebrate your faith with......
Continue Reading "Every Time You Steal a Baby Jesus, God Kills a Kitten"December 4, 2006
As much as Chicagoist loves to rail against the corruption and graft that plagues our fair city, occasionally our obsession with back-room deals and hereditary peerage takes a back seat to more mundane fascinations. With this in mind, today we bring you this interesting tidbit: Barack Obama is a smoker! We stumbled across Philadelphia Inquirer staff writer Michael Currie Schaffer's meditation on what makes a candidate more real, a person more than a media hack's......
Continue Reading "Alive With Pleasure"November 30, 2006
The Sun-Times is reporting on the labor movement's most recent moves in city politics. The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) has compiled a researched list of "targeted" wards where it will rally its resources to oust incumbent aldermen, or try to fill vacant seats with candidates that are sympathetic to its point of view. Further exacerbating this threat to the entrenched are the alliances that SEIU has made in the past 5 years. Following on......
Continue Reading "Labor Pains"November 14, 2006
Mayor Daley and Governor Blagojevich are asking lawmakers to increase the state’s minimum wage by a dollar, to $7.50 an hour. Illinois’ wage of $6.50 an hour (signed into law by Blago three years ago) is already higher than the federal minimum of $5.15 an hour. Despite the Democrats holding the governor’s seat and a majority in the General Assembly, one state representative thinks it will be a tough bill to pass, which is both......
Continue Reading "Daley and Blago Want to Maximize the Minimum Wage"November 7, 2006
So far, the voting experiences of those in the Chicagoist offices range from easy as pie to frustrating as hell. Some of us breezed right through this morning with short wait times and smart, competent election judges. But one writer said everyone at her polling place had his or her voting status challenged. One of our weekend writers said she ended up on the business end of a voting machine programmed for the wrong precinct,......
Continue Reading "Stories From the Voting Front"November 3, 2006
Chicagoist is keen on keeping up with the latest news at CPS, especially when it’s good news. Mayor Daley and CPS CEO Arne Duncan announced yesterday that $27.5 million in federal money came through for a program to help retain good teachers at some of the schools which need them the most. As several local papers report, the program aims to reward teachers individually and schools as a whole for jobs well done. Some of......
Continue Reading "27 Million Reasons to Teach for CPS"October 27, 2006
After a week jam-packed with shows, we're not surprised that this weekend finds us wishing that payday hadn't been so long ago. Did you know Morrissey is making his only 2006 appearance in North America here in Chicago? We feel like it’s all we’ve heard about all week. But it’s true. Except for when he played SXSW back in March. So, not as special now. But still: Morrissey! Still spelling cranky as s-u-a-v-e after all......
Continue Reading "Empty Out Your Wallet"October 26, 2006
Chicagoist found this bizarre video today: Yes, yes, the video is juvenile, disjointed, mildly delusional, and most likely from someone that has no affiliation whatsoever to the fellow that is challenging 46th Ward Alderman Helen Shiller this winter. But if you add it up with some other tidbits, you can see that Shiller is going to have to run a campaign this year to hold on to her office. Besides this bit of weirdness, there......
Continue Reading "Run Helen Run!"October 21, 2006
“From Birmingham to Manchester to Brooklyn to Chicago, we’re tired of being poverty pimped by the politicians and poverty pimped by the rappers….” This is Rhymefest after meeting with David Cameron, the head of the Conservative Party in the United Kingdom. At a British Society of Magazine Editors event in June, Cameron stated that Radio 1, a British Radio station operated by the BBC, plays music which "encourages people to carry guns and knives." Rhymefest......
Continue Reading "Rhymefest Jumps the Pond for Some Earl Grey"October 19, 2006
In Chicago, summer film viewing usually means … whatever’s air-conditioned. The Outdoor Film Festival is a notable exception, but generally speaking, summertime is an annual famine where interesting film choices are few and far between. But autumn is a horse of a different color. Suddenly (due in part to the Oscar race) it's time to bulk up. No sooner does the Chicago International Film Festival draw to a close (winners were announced this week) than......
Continue Reading "The Film Equivalent of Carb-Loading"October 9, 2006
The AP ran a story yesterday about the death of Chicago’s Robert Taylor Homes housing project. It follows a similar piece from the Medill News Service back in April. Once the largest housing project in the world and the home of Mr. T, the RTH occupied a two-mile stretch on State Street from 39th to 54th Street. At its peak, the housing project held 27,000 people. Now, only one building remains, and it will be......
Continue Reading "Robert Taylor Homes, R.I.P."September 26, 2006
We have never made it a secret that we like bees* and the good work they do. However, we know that people tend to be wary of bees. And ex-convicts. The public at large tends to get anxious at the sight of, starts backing away from, and doesn't have a really friendly relationship with bees or ex-cons. But in the neighborhood of North Lawndale, there are people working hard to make a difference in the......
Continue Reading "Burt's Bees Ain't Got Nothin' on This Operation"September 18, 2006
If you were having trouble getting into Nordstrom’s this weekend, blame Bono. The U2 mouthpiece and his wife Ali Hewson were in town to sell ridiculously expensive T-shirts in an effort to raise money for the African village of Butha-Buthe in Lesotho, South Africa. The T-shirts sell for $40 and are part of Bono’s dual mission to end poverty and bring attention to the AIDS problem in Africa. Ten dollars from the sale of each......
Continue Reading "Next Up: Fighting the Gout with Gauchos!"August 24, 2006
Direct from the 16th International AIDS Conference, the Keiskamma Altarpiece, sharing a message of suffering and triumph, has arrived in Chicago. Over 120 South African women and men from a region particularly stricken by poverty and AIDS collaborated on this massive, multi-paneled work of embroidery, beads, wire sculpture, and photographs. The 13 foot by 22 foot collaboration was inspired by the Isenheim Altarpiece, painted around 500 years ago in Alsace, France during a horrible poisoning......
Continue Reading "From South Africa to the Near North Side"May 26, 2006
When we ran our first Intonation Fest giveaway a few weeks ago, we received more entries for it than any other giveaway we’ve ever run on this site. So when the organizers tossed another set of tickets at us, we decided to up the stakes a little and make you get a little literary. We asked you to send in a brief essay that detailed why you should receive the passes and no one else.......
Continue Reading "Winners of the Intonation Fest Giveaway"April 17, 2006
The Westboro Baptist Church, with the charmingly named website of www.godhatesfags.com, is coming to Chicago Wednesday. Chicagoist is going to dub this the Evil Jackass Monsters of Hate Tour. The “Church” is based in Topeka, Kansas (that’s good publicity for the city), and it’s been protesting the funerals of Iraq war vets. The “Church” feels that our casualties in Iraq are part of God’s punishment for the United States tolerating the gays. It's monitored as......
Continue Reading "Hogs and Hope"February 28, 2006
Steep Theatre’s aim to produce ‘everyman theater’ fits nicely in Chicago’s self-made arts community. Strong performances and smart programming turned heads and filled the seats in 2005. Now the ensemble reaches further, offering two productions in repertory examining poverty, rural isolation, and misplaced trust. The Night Heron is a smart and funny look at that world; Of Mice and Men never completely captures it. Of Mice and Men As you may recall from high school......
Continue Reading "Theater Review: Of Earthy Mice and a Soaring Heron"November 10, 2005
Calling attention to unique and threatened urban spaces, Preservation Chicago has released their annual list of endangered Chicago buildings. Not much on the list will surprise anyone who follows the ongoing drama of developer/preservationist smackdowns. We expected to see: Promontory Point, with its beautiful but fading limestone steps. If the City has its way, these will go the way of their concrete-laden counterparts to the north. DePaul University’s Hayes-Healey Center, which the CTA plans to......
Continue Reading "Preservationists' Magnificent Seven"