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Welcome to Chicago: The inside scoop on media’s hot spots

Posted in Robert Feder | Chicago Media blog by Robert Feder on Aug 10, 2011 at 12:00am

Merchandise Mart

The following was adapted from a piece I wrote for the Time Out Chicago Student Guide:

Chicago has always been known as a great news town — where TV anchors and newspaper columnists rank with top athletes and unindicted politicians among the city’s biggest celebrities. Want to be an instant expert on Chicago’s rich media history? Here’s a guide to six spots that every true local news junkie should know:

 

Tribune Tower, 435 N Michigan Ave

It looks like a neo-Gothic cathedral, but it’s been home to the Chicago Tribune, the dominant daily of “Chicagoland” (a word invented by Tribune editors) ever since the newspaper championed a little-known politician named Abraham Lincoln. It also houses WGN Radio, whose call letters stand for the Trib’s old slogan: “World’s Greatest Newspaper.” A showcase studio at street level allows visitors to watch WGN’s talk show hosts talk into microphones. 

Didja know… Embedded in the limestone façade of Tribune Tower are tiny artifacts lifted from landmarks and monuments around the world, including stones from the Great Wall of China, the Taj Mahal and more than 150 other historic sites.

 

Harpo Studios, 1058 W Washington Blvd 

The greatest stars in the world — as well as countless fans — passed through these doors each day to pay homage to Queen of Television Oprah Winfrey. After 25 years, the show ended in May 2011, but her old staff will keep the place busy taping Rosie O’Donnell’s talk show for Oprah’s OWN network. 

Didja know… Known as Chicago’s Second Regiment Armory in the early 1900s, the Harpo building was used as a morgue after the Eastland steamer capsized in the Chicago River in 1915, claiming more than 800 lives. There’s talk that the place has been haunted ever since by the ghost of the “Gray Lady.”

 

Playboy Mansion, 1340 N State Pkwy

Before he moved out west to the Holmby Hills estate of Girls Next Door fame, a pajama-clad, Pepsi-swilling Hugh Hefner edited Playboy magazine by day and cavorted with playmates at night in this 70-room Gold Coast mansion. Throughout the ’60s and early ’70s, Hef hosted celebrity parties here that went on for days. In 1984, Playboy leased the property to the Art Institute of Chicago for $10 a year. (Corrected from original reference to 1974.) It later was converted to private condos. 

Didja know… Once adorning the mansion’s front door was a brass plate with the Latin inscription: Si Non Oscillas, Noli Tintinnare (“If you don’t swing, don’t ring”).

 

Billy Goat Tavern, 430 N Michigan Ave

Immortalized by columnist Mike Royko (who drank here often and wrote of it lovingly), this subterranean sanctum became the most famous journalists’ hangout in town. You’ll still find a few ink-stained wretches among its denizens. More recently it has become neutral ground for politicians to come together for a beer or two, including the 2010 post-election summit of U.S. Senate foes Mark Kirk and Alexi Giannoulias. 

Didja know… In tribute to an early Saturday Night Live sketch inspired by the tavern, there’s a sign on the wall that reads: “Cheezborger, Cheezborger, Cheezborger. No Pepsi. Coke.” (In the original sketch, the great John Belushi actually said: “No Coke. Pepsi.”)

 

Merchandise Mart, between Wells and Orleans Sts at the Chicago River

From NBC studios that originated some of America’s favorite radio shows starting in 1930, a who’s who of video pioneers in the late ’40s and ’50s invented what came to be known as The Chicago School of Television. The Mart’s broadcast heritage continues today with radio stations WLUP and WWWN located along the second-floor gallery. A bridge over Orleans Street connects to the Apparel Center, now home to the Chicago Sun-Times, the city-centric, must-read competitor to the Tribune.

Didja know… Built as a wholesale warehouse by Marshall Field & Co., this imposing 4-million square-foot edifice, known as the world’s largest privately owned office building, was owned by the Kennedy Family from 1945 to 1998.

 

Ambassador East Hotel, 1301 N State Pkwy

Celebrity journalism was practically invented in the hotel’s famed Pump Room. Before the jet age, stars traveling to either coast by train stopped off at Union Station and were whisked over to this swanky watering hole where gossip columnists like the legendary Irv Kupcinet got them to spill their secrets. (On September 12, the hotel is expected to be renamed Public Chicago, and the Pump Room will reopen.) 

Didja know… Kupcinet, whose Kup’s Column was a fixture in the Sun-Times for 60 years, had an exact replica of the Pump Room’s Booth One installed in his Lake Shore Drive apartment.

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WMAQ Radio used to have on display, the huge rotating drum (full of junk) that was the SFX for Fibber's closet. When the Billy Goat's sidewalk cigarette extinguisher burned up a few months ago, I bought them a new one. Still a fun place to visit.
By Doug Verified (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 5:56 am
Im guessing when the Museum of Broadcasting reopens, Fibber's closet sound effect will be there. It was there when it was in the Cultural Center years ago.
By steve (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 6:25 am
Don't forget the refrigerator box Walter Jacobson slept in when he was homeless. It's still on Lower Wacker. I think a number of former Fox employes use it as a time share now.
By lise dominatrix (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 6:48 am
Harpo Studios began life as an armory, which is where the Eastland survivors were taken. In the '40s, the building was a roller skating rink that was converted into a movie studio by film producer Fred Niles in the late '50s. For 30 years thereafter, Niles ran the biggest film company in town. When Niles became ill in the early '80s, he was going to sell the studio to another film producer. But in true Chicago tradition, a politician who was working with the buyer, got wind of Oprah's studio search, cut the buyer out and made a tidy profit selling the studio to Oprah. Oprah spent $3 million to renovate the place and ultimately bought up the entire block.
By Ruth L Ratny (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 7:43 am
Didja know that 20 North Wacker had a set of studios that at one time housed WENR, WBKB, WCFC-TV plus+ It was a sort of "plug and Play" facility.
By Bruce (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 8:37 am
I'd add Trump Tower, former site of the Chicago Sun-Times and Daily News, where the public could watch the first floor presses rumble to life several times a day and such Chicago luminaries as Mike Royko, Bill Mauldin, Roger Ebert, Lois Wille, Ron Powers, John H. White, Kup, Roeper, Roger Simon, Herman and Rick Kogan, Feder, and many others rode the rickety escalator to work to the 4th floor editorial offices. And let's not forget John Belushi, who filmed some scenes there in for Continental Divide. The Daily News won 13 Pulitzers before it closed in 1978 and the Sun-Times has won eight.
By Les (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 9:48 am
This is a brilliant tour, Rob. Delightful, entertaining and informative. I particularly liked the backstory to the Harpo Studio building.
By Dan Miller (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 10:01 am
You left out the Stone Container Building on Michigan Avenue, once the home of WLS Radio, the largest station in the U.S. in the 1970s. Also the Playboy BUILDING, which was on Walton St.
By Anonymous (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 10:43 am
Greetings Rob -- I enjoyed reading your media “hot spots” post today; the “Didja knows” were very interesting in particular! One quick thing to point out…in your reference to the Apparel Center, you only mention it as home of the Sun-Times. As you know, the Apparel Center has also been home to both Fox Sports Chicago (1997-2004) and now, Comcast SportsNet Chicago, (2004-present). Thanks for listening and go Blackhawks, Bulls, Cubs and White Sox!
By Jeff N (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 11:22 am
It is worth noting that the Billy Goat was NOT the restaurant portrayed in the SNL sketch and was not the source of the "Cheezborger" phrase. Belushi was paying homage to a diner owned by his father Adam. It wasn't until the mid to late 1980s (after John died and Adam Belushi's restaurant was long gone) that Sam Sianis, owner of the Billy Goat, adopted the "Cheezborger" phrase for his own.
By He Who Must Not Be Named (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 11:29 am
==>I would add Medill School, Columbia College, and similar journalism schools, that despite what their graduates purport to exhibit, DO NOT HAVE LAW SCHOOLS. As far as I tell, they don't have medical schools either--except in Northwestern's case, if a journalism student was enrolled in a cross-school program. One can figure in which direction this observation is going. ==>One could also mention that Trump Tower is on the site of the former Sun-Times and Chicago Daily News building. ==>Finally, one could ask Bruce DuMont about all the political machinations behind the erection of his latest monument (Museum of Broadcast Communications).
By jack (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 11:33 am
The Wrigley Building was home to both WBBM and WIND. The Carbon and Carbide Building housed WJJD. WAAF and WFMT had studios in the LaSalle-Wacker building.
By Marty Robinson (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 12:32 pm
How about the old Chicago Daily News Building?
By Anonymous (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 12:40 pm
Not Feder's problem, but why do you post his articles twice to your RSS feeds every day? You're kind of missing the point of using an RSS reader.
By Bob (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 2:19 pm
How about the old City News Bureau.... where in they told Columbia College j-school graduate students that there were more people in journalism school than actual working journalists - and that we should get out while the getting was good. That same year, Medill profs told their grad students that the newspaper was dead. The year was 1991.
By Chloe K (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 2:59 pm
Hey Rob, the Playboy Mansion was l "leased" by the Art Institute of Chicago for use as dorm rooms in 1984, not 1974. The late Arthur Rubloff brokered that deal.
By Rich (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 3:03 pm
Too bad there isn't a museum / homage to WCFL at Marina City...
By MR (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 3:22 pm
Really? C'mon R-Fed anyone with Google or who has seen a Geoffrey Baer special or 5 could do a post like this. This was Red Eye/Chicago Now material. Give us the goods. What REALLY happened inside some of those walls you mention. You have the stories, share the wealth. Medill F for laziness.
By Smitty (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 3:55 pm
First @Jack, I don't care to know about Bruce DuMont's erections. Second, it's always good to have an "evergreen" column all ready for those slow days on the beat, eh Rob? Although Kup having Booth One in his apartment is interesting. BUt what a name for the new hotel. "Public Chicago?" I think their marketing team has been spending a little too much time in the Pump Room's liquor closet.
By Unverified Forever (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 5:04 pm
How about a listing of where the elite of Chicago journalists eat and drink? I know there are some spots that have been revered for years by the print guys. And it would be fun to go watch certain members of the broadcast media get soused, too. Especially when the foxy TV broads (and Trib interns) are feelin' frisky, you knowwhuttImean?
By Anonymous Dork (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 5:09 pm
What about the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Building, which was the first home of WCIU-TV and my favorite show, Soul Train?
By Don C. (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 5:31 pm
There is a wonderful book called "Chicago Televison" by Daniel Berger and Steve Jajkowsk(with a forward by Bob Sirott), which gives a very detailed history of all of Chicago's television history. Steve and Daniel have also hosted bus tours on the subject through the Chicago History Museum. Here is a link to the book: http://www.amazon.com/Chicago-Television-America-Arcadia-Publishing/dp/0738577138/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1313015505&sr=1-1
By Marc Davis (not verified) on 8/10/2011 at 5:40 pm
Smitty, _I_ was starting to feel like it was a Geoffrey Baer special, "Chicago's Broadcasting Facilities", but without the WTTW Pledge Breaks. :-) 20 North Wacker Drive was also where WFLD's first studios were at before they went to Marina City (Where the House Of Blues is) preceding their current Michigan Avenue location. 20 North also had WNBQ/WMAQ(TV)'s Transmitter equipment before moving to the John Hancock Building (then to Willis Tower later on). WCFC(TV) had Studios for a few years on the near West Side at 38 South Peoria (Where the Merit School of Music is now) before they sold out to "Bud" Paxson and hightailed out to Aurora to build their own High Definition facility (where the land and building are now owned by Hobby Lobby).
By Bob Y. (not verified) on 8/11/2011 at 6:10 pm
Didja know that Harpo Studios was the Roller Bowl skating rink in the late 40's ealy 50's? As kids we skated there every Sat afternoon.
By Lorraine K. (not verified) on 8/22/2011 at 8:46 am
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About Robert Feder
Robert Feder has been keeping tabs on the media for more than three decades, including 28 years as a reporter and television/radio columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times. He's a lifelong Chicagoan and graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. At age 14, he founded the first and only Walter Cronkite Fan Club.
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