Born and raised and still living in Chicago, Rick Kogan has worked for the Chicago Daily News, Chicago Sun-Times and the Tribune, where he currently is a columnist. Inducted into the Chicago Journalism Hall of Fame in 2003, he hosts “After Hours with Rick Kogan” on WGN radio and is the author of a dozen books, including “A Chicago Tavern.
She helped support and shape the magazine that would become Playboy Enterprises, but never tried to capitalize on Hugh Hefner's subsequent fame after their divorce in 1959.
Corkery’s creative spark was on display for more than three decades as one of the writers and performers in the Chicago Bar Association's “Christmas Spirits” show.
In person and in conversation, Schapiro was not the sort of guy you might imagine hanging around with David Bowie, walking with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. or hanging around...
A new exhibit at American Writers Museum on Michigan Avenue has the words of Flannery O'Connor, Malcolm X, Harold Ramis and others about how they felt about religion and spirituality.