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Bankruptcy Judge Gives Sears Another Chance, OKs $5.2B Plan

A bankruptcy judge has blessed a $5.2 billion plan by Sears chairman and biggest shareholder Eddie Lampert to keep the iconic business going. The approval means roughly 425 stores and 45,000 jobs will be preserved.

Feb. 7, 2019 - Full Show

Watch the Feb. 7, 2019 full episode of “Chicago Tonight.”

‘Missing’ Uptown Chandeliers to Make Their Way Back Home

After decades of neglect and decay, Chicago’s historic Uptown Theater is finally being brought back to life. And some of the original light fixtures – painstakingly restored – will soon make their way back to the 1925 movie palace.

Pritzker Advances Agenda, But Transition Reports Slow to Emerge

When will Gov. J.B. Pritzker release the reports he says will serve as his guides? And why is it taking so long?

Illinois Senate Backs $15 Hourly Minimum Wage Within 6 Years

The Illinois Senate voted Thursday to hike the statewide minimum wage to $15 an hour within six years, quickly advancing a top campaign promise of newly elected Democratic Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

Bloody Handprint Among Evidence in Chinese Scholar’s Case

Prosecutors are building a case, partly on a bloody handprint and the responses of a cadaver-sniffing dog, that a former University of Illinois physics student killed a 26-year-old Chinese scholar in 2017 at his off-campus apartment.

Head of Chicago Police Union Sounds Alarm on Consent Decree

Are Chicago police officers ready for the reforms ordered by a new consent decree? We hear from Kevin Graham, president of the Chicago Fraternal Order of Police.  

Chicago’s Big-Time Business Club Calls for State Tax Increase

A new report from the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago recommends a 1-percent increase in the state income tax. 

Mobile Carriers Tout Upcoming 5G Networks. How Fast is That?

Blazing speeds are reportedly coming to your devices with 5G. Chicago Tribune technology reporter Ally Marotti tells us what to expect – and when.

Jazz Enthusiast Brings Passion to New Book ‘The Jazz Alphabet’

We learn the ABCs of jazz with Chicago author and illustrator Neil Shapiro, whose new book is a “work of love” – and an ode to the greats.

MWRD Says It’s On Pace to Cut Greenhouse Gas Emissions by 50 Percent

The Chicago area’s wastewater treatment agency says it is ahead of schedule in its efforts to combat climate change. 

CPS Teacher Removed After Allegedly Bringing in Friend to Beat Student

“I want my mama,” the 9-year-old victim pleaded as he was being beaten with a belt inside his school's bathroom, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday. His attacker told him, “I am your mama.”

‘The Father’ Captures Fractured Reality of Dementia to Blistering Effect

The harrowing realism of “The Father” finesses a remarkable feat of imagination that makes the audience experience the same disorientation, confusion and anger that accompany the protagonist’s own loss of clarity and memory. 

Spotlight Politics: More Stories of Aldermen Behaving Badly

Chicago aldermen are caught up in some questionable or unscrupulous behavior, as the campaign for mayor gets down and dirty. Carol Marin, Paris Schutz and Amanda Vinicky have details in this week’s roundtable.

Chicago Police Watchdog: ‘Every Profession’ Has a Code of Silence

There’s been a lot of talk in Chicago about police reform and a police code of silence. Sydney Roberts, the head of the city’s police watchdog agency, weighs in on the newly approved federal consent decree.