Arts & Entertainment
This fall, 100 homeless families with school-age children will gain permanent housing and support services, thanks to a partnership between the city and the nonprofit Chicago Coalition for the Homeless.
For nearly a decade, the website Forgotten Chicago has documented the city’s storied past. Meet the site’s co-founder and editor, Jacob Kaplan.
A giant pop-culture convention, Earth Day celebrations and a wine festival usher in the weekend. Here are 10 things to do in and around Chicago.
From “Downton Abbey” to “My Fair Lady,” a conversation with the stars of Lyric Opera’s spring musical.
A big show is brewing under the big top, with a cast and crew of more than 200 – plus 65 horses. We go behind the scenes of “Odysseo.”
Chicago’s homeless population was 82,212 in 2015, according to figures released Wednesday by the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless.
Should Chicago annex the suburbs to save its shrinking population? Why one author thinks that might be a good idea.
Could the city’s open data portal be your new go-to website for restaurant planning?
An Albany Park bar toasts the late painter each week at a colorful event. We went to check out the “happy little trees” at Nighthawk.
A discussion about human rights on the South Side of Chicago – including public health and criminal justice – takes place Tuesday evening at a River North gallery.
Reports of abuse at U.S. immigration detention facilities, including those in Illinois, are rarely investigated, according to data obtained by a national nonprofit agency.
Chicago’s magnificent skyline gets plenty of well-deserved attention, but what about architecture and design in our neighborhoods?
The city’s annual Summer Film Series returns with a line-up of Chicago classics and two of the most-buzzed about movies of 2016.
The 92-story skyscraper is a regular feature of Chicago architecture tours. But a changing political landscape has led some tour guides to be more careful with their comments about the structure.
Area teens can add one more freebie to their summer to-do lists.
The orange-and-black insect has flocked to a Chicago neighborhood, but its presence is more of a political act than a natural one.