Cubs Beat Dodgers In Must-Win Game 4, Fight To Stay In NLCS
WBEZ sports contributor Cheryl Raye Stout joins breaks down Game 4 highlights and what it would take for the Chicago Cubs to go all the way.
WBEZ sports contributor Cheryl Raye Stout joins breaks down Game 4 highlights and what it would take for the Chicago Cubs to go all the way.
‘Curious City’s’ Monica Eng has uncovered some of the anomalies at Streets and Sanitation, and raked together the info you need to get your leaves collected in an environmentally friendly way.
It’s what we in radio use to communicate with you. It’s what we use to put images in your head. It’s made by nature, by machine, and by man. It can be relaxing and pleasurable, or harsh and annoying. It’s sound. It’s all around us, yet few of us stop and listen. Chris Hoff and Dan Harnett are on a mission to bring listeners the most unique and interesting sounds on the planet. They’re the co-creators of The World According to Sound, a show that runs regularly on All Things Considered, where each episode is 90 seconds long.
After qualifying for 7 straight World Cups, the American men will not take part in next summer’s World Cup in Russia. What happened? Is this a symptom of a larger problem about how organized soccer is run in the United States? And where do we go from here? Freelance sports writer Dan Shalin joins Morning Shift with thoughts and answers. We also take calls from listeners.
It’s now a do-or-die for the Chicago Cubs. The reigning World Series champs lost Game 4 of the National League Division Series to the Washington Nationals.
Clearwater joins ‘Morning Shift’ to talk about his musical journey ahead of a special gig at the Logan Center for the Arts called Bringing the Blues Back to the South Side.
WBEZ reporter Michael Puente lays out the fiscal and political ramifications of the rollback of the sweetened-beverage tax.
The new anthology ‘Tales of Two Americas’ features essays by 36 major contemporary writers talking about the nation’s socioeconomic chasm.
What in our lives is worth preserving? Tanner Woodford of the Chicago Design Museum is gathering responses to that question for a new book.
Author Rich Cohen digs for the reasons why things were so tough for so long and why it took the Chicago Cubs 108 years to win a World Series.