Chicago Cubs announcer Jeremiah Paprocki has a bold new gig: a late-night talk show

The Voice of Wrigley Field is hosting and producing a new late-night series.

Jeremiah Paprocki in the Vocalo studio
Jeremiah Paprocki made Cubs history when he became a public address announcer for the team in 2021. Now, he's about to start a new side gig: hosting a late-night talk for for Chicago. Morgan Ciocca/Vocalo Radio
Jeremiah Paprocki in the Vocalo studio
Jeremiah Paprocki made Cubs history when he became a public address announcer for the team in 2021. Now, he's about to start a new side gig: hosting a late-night talk for for Chicago. Morgan Ciocca/Vocalo Radio

Chicago Cubs announcer Jeremiah Paprocki has a bold new gig: a late-night talk show

The Voice of Wrigley Field is hosting and producing a new late-night series.

WBEZ brings you fact-based news and information. Sign up for our newsletters to stay up to date on the stories that matter.

Jeremiah Paprocki’s lifelong fascination with sports broadcasting led him to become the youngest announcer — and the first Black announcer — in Chicago Cubs history. Now “the Voice of Wrigley Field” has a new side gig: hosting a late-night talk show.

Late Nights in Chicago will tape its first episode at the Studebaker Theater on March 24 and feature special guest Shermann “Dilla” Thomas and a musical performance by Matt Muse. Paprocki told WBEZ’s sister station Vocalo that, while he’s still in the planning process for future episodes, he hopes it will be the first of an ongoing series of shows to tape at Moonlight Studios in the West Loop.

The show will be distributed on YouTube and will largely be an independent venture — for now.

“I think it’d be cool if we can get to a point where it’s just an independent production and it’s fully sustainable off of investors, investments and sponsorships, and, you know, keep it running that way.”

Paprocki, who is 24, found a passion for sports announcing while in high school, lending his voice to school events and sports teams before becoming the Cubs’ announcer three years ago. Similarly, he found his calling for late-night television early on when he saw a Jimmy Kimmel Live! taping while on spring break in 2019.

“I was blown away by that experience because, as a live studio audience member, you get to see everything that goes on behind the scenes. You see the executive producer behind the booth, you see all the cameramen behind the cameras,” Paprocki said. “I actually tried out an earlier version of this show at UIC called Late Night Flame, and that was a cool experience. We teamed up with our creative and digital services team over at UIC to put it together.”

The problem was, the show launched in 2020 right before the COVID-19 pandemic. Late Night Flame only lasted three episodes before COVID lockdowns began, but Paprocki took a lot away from the experience, including a working relationship with producer and collaborator Caleb Brookman.

“I sat down with Caleb early 2023, and I was like, ‘Hey, let’s do this again,’ ” Paprocki recalled. “Let’s do it on a bigger scale in Chicago for Chicago, but compete with those big late-night networks that are on TV.”

Jeremiah Paprocki Press Photo
Jeremiah Paprocki found a passion for sports announcing while in high school, lending his voice to school events and sports teams before becoming the Cubs’ announcer three years ago. Courtesy of Jeremiah Paprocki

As a Chicago native, Paprocki grew up captivated by the city’s sports teams and took a special interest in the announcers for the Chicago Bulls. Inspired at the thought of pursuing sports announcing as a career, he auditioned for the Cubs while still a student at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He announced his first game, Cubs v. Nationals, on May 17, 2021, at just 21 years old.

“Knowing that I put in the work early starting in high school and then at college, and getting a pro job while still in college is very much so unheard of,” Paprocki said. “I was very overjoyed by that … A positive story, especially a local positive story, definitely carried a lot.”

But Paprocki stayed in college while he voiced games for the Cubs and even took remote classes from Wrigley Field. The opportunities that being in school offered for the announcer led to greater things.

“I was the PA announcer for UIC games, so I was getting my experience on campus, working in those sporting events … If it wasn’t for going to UIC, I wouldn’t have met Caleb and I wouldn’t have been able to partner with him on this venture or any of the past ventures we’ve been on,” Paprocki said.

With Late Nights in Chicago, Paprocki and his team hope to showcase Chicago by highlighting the city’s diverse culture and talent. The show will include a mix of entertainment, humor and insightful conversations from guests.

If you go: Tickets for the first taping of Late Nights in Chicago on March 24 start at $24.50 at the Studebaker Theater. Subsequent tapings will be held at Moonlight studios. You can watch taped episodes of Late Nights in Chicago on YouTube.