05/30/2026
No "After Hours" this Sunday, as we take a break while a couple of new shows move into that vaunted 5-7 pm timeslot. WGN would like to continue its long, very long, relationship with me and has been rather persuasive in explaining how a podcast version of the show would allow for longer interviews (uninterrupted by news and commercials) and give me more flexibility. So there is much for me to learn before we launch or crash. I will keep you posted.
05/26/2026
Tim O'Malley was one of the most naturally funny people this city has ever known, memorable as a performer and teacher at The Second City. He was also a man who used some of his own experiences to help and inspire others.
Column: Remembering Tim O’Malley, a big comedic talent with an even bigger heart
He shared the Second City Mainstage with Bonnie Hunt, Tim Meadows, Bob Odenkirk and Chris Farley, later becoming a teacher and leading a program for fellow addicts.
05/24/2026
5-7 pm Sunday brings you Della Leavitt on her fine novel, “Vivian’s Decision," Della Leavitt; tattoo artist Ben Wahhh on efforts to help domestic violence survivors Deluxe tattoo and ..org; music and a Royko letter about Sam Sianis.
05/20/2026
Two new burger books by George Motz and Maggie Hennessy are great. But asked long ago why we are a country that is nuts for burgers, the late Sam Sianis of the Billy Goat put it, with brilliant simplicity, “People like them because they’re good.”
Column: These books spread the gospel about the simple hamburger
Chicago writer Maggie Hennessy’s first book is “Hamburger Bible.” George Motz wrote the cross-country odyssey “Hamburger America.”
05/19/2026
Julian Frazin was admired for his legal skills as an attorney and judge over his long life. But it was his creative entertainment gifts and energy that made him most admired and unforgettable. Here's a gift link:
Column: Remembering Julian Frazin, a lawyer, judge and creative dynamo
Along with a career as a judge and attorney, he wrote “Miracle — the Musical” about the Cubs, as well as songs and children’s books, and contributed to the annual holiday show by the Chicago Bar Association.
05/17/2026
is one hour Sunday, 6-7 pm and brings you Frank Maugeri, artistic director of Cabinet of Curiosity, Sonya Henderson (founder of Mother’s Healing Circle) and others to talk about “Honor Thy Mother” Saturday 8-11 p.m. First Presbyterian Church of Chicago
05/15/2026
Sam Sianis has died at 91. He was one of a kind and the hardest worker you could ever meet and a man who handled the considerable Billy Goat fame and curse with style and grace...and that smile.
Sam Sianis of the Billy Goat, Chicago’s most famous saloonkeeper, dies at 91
Sam Sianis, a Greek immigrant who became one of the most successful saloonkeepers and a popular figure in the sports and media worlds, died in Chicago early Friday morning. He was 91.
05/13/2026
Memorial Day 1981, Dan Goodwin, aka Spider-Dan, climbed into city's sky, saying “If I was going to die, I was going to die on my own terms.” He is alive and well, has a book, has beat cancer and tells Rick Kogan, “I felt like I was floating in space.”
Column: Remembering when Dan Goodwin, aka Spider-Dan, touched Chicago’s sky
In 1981, the climber Dan Goodwin made himself part of Chicago’s history by climbing both the Sears Tower and the Hancock Building. He has a new memoir.
05/12/2026
As rain whipped the park across the street, Garry Trudeau told me, “Writing cartoons is a very solitary profession, a very monastic existence.” The first major biography of this shy man is coming very soon.
Column: Ready to travel into the secret life of Garry Trudeau and ‘Doonesbury’?
A biography delves into the private life of the “Doonesbury” cartoonist. We spent a day together in New York decades ago.
05/12/2026
Joining Studs Terkel, Gwendolyn Brooks, Scott Turow, Stuart Dybek, Sara Paretsky, and other powerful writers, Patti Smith, born during a Chicago blizzard, will become a Harold Washington Literary Award.
Chicago-born Patti Smith is the winner of this year’s Harold Washington Literary Award
Singer and author Patti Smith will return to Chicago in September to accept the award before the 41st annual Printers Row Lit Fest.