
Why Chicago Should Be Your Springtime Escape
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Looking for an easy city escape this spring? Chicago is just a quick flight from many American cities, often at surprisingly affordable rates. You'll touch down in a city bursting with incredible art, amazing food, and experiences straight out of your favorite movies.
Here's how to live your best Chicago weekend this spring.
Bueller? Bueller?
Re-create 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off' with a visit to the Art Institute of Chicago. This museum spans more than a million square feet and is home to masterpieces like Picasso's 'The Old Guitarist' and Grant Wood's 'American Gothic.' For the full Ferris Bueller experience, follow the museum's official movie tour, which takes you through six key artworks from the film.
Next, take in the city from 1,353 feet up at the Willis Tower Skydeck (formerly the Sears Tower), just like Sloan did in the movie. And, of course, no Ferris-style day is complete without catching a Cubs game at Wrigley Field. Built in 1914, this legendary ballpark is where Babe Ruth famously called his shot in the 1932 World Series. After the game, celebrate a Cubs win (fingers crossed) with a drink at one of Wrigleyville's lively bars.
Float Through History on an Architecture Boat Tour
Yes, it's touristy. And you may not even be all that into architecture. But this tour is hands down one of the best ways to experience Chicago. You'll catch one-of-a-kind city views along the river while guides point out architectural gems like the corncob-shaped Marina City towers and the Tribune Tower's dreamy neo-Gothic design. If you can, opt for an evening tour—the city lights reflecting on the water are nothing short of incredible.
Snap a Selfie at 'The Bean'
No trip to Chicago is complete without a stop at Cloud Gate—better known as 'The Bean.' This massive, mirrored sculpture in Millennium Park distorts the skyline (and your selfie) in the coolest way.
People hang out as Chicago's skyline is reflected in the Cloud Gate sculpture, otherwise known as "the Bean," in Millennium Park on May 15, 2022.
Erin Hooley/Chicago Tribune/TNS
Laugh The Night Away at Second City
If you need a good laugh, head to the legendary Second City. This comedy theater launched the careers of Tina Fey, Bill Murray, and Tim Baltz from 'The Righteous Gemstones.' Shows run nightly with a mix of improv and sharp sketch comedy.
Bite Into an authentic Chicago-Style Hot Dog
Chicago takes its hot dogs seriously. Anthony Bourdain once called them 'the finest in the land,' and he wasn't wrong. Piled high with mustard, pickles, sport peppers, relish, onions, tomatoes, a dill spear. and celery salt—no ketchup allowed—it's a flavor-packed classic. Grab one at a neighborhood stand or hit up local favorite Superdawg.
Swing By The Legendary Green Mill Jazz Club
Cap off your evening with live jazz at the Green Mill, a historic club that was once Al Capone's go-to hangout during Prohibition. The vibe is old-school cool, the music is top-notch, and if you want the full experience, order a whiskey soda or a local beer—this isn't a craft cocktail kind of place.
Copyright 2025 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Visit at ajc.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Related Stories
3/19/2025
1/23/2025
Dear Readers: We would love to hear from you. What topics would you like to read about? Please send your feedback and tips to
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
Sydney Sweeney's 'Great Jeans' Illuminate the Dangerous Resurgence of Eugenics
American Eagle came under fire recently for an ad campaign featuring actress Sydney Sweeney. In one ad, Sweeney fiddles with her jeans, saying, "Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair color, personality, and even eye color. My genes are blue." A male narrator finishes with, "Sydney Sweeney has great jeans." It's a play on homophones, but the wordplay reveals a more sinister element: Sweeney does not just have great American Eagle jeans, she has great American genes. Picking a blonde, blue-eyed, able-bodied all-American girl was not an accident. It was about showcasing what are "good genes," and thus what are "bad genes." It's a modern eugenics movement proudly re-emerging amid a welcoming political climate. A window display of actress Sydney Sweeney is seen on a window of an American Eagle store on Aug. 1, 2025, in New York City. A window display of actress Sydney Sweeney is seen on a window of an American Eagle store on Aug. 1, 2025, in New York City. Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images The American eugenics movement has historically promoted the superiority of Anglo-Saxon, able-bodied, wealthy people, leading to harmful policies from the Immigration Act of 1924 barring immigrants from Asia to a practice of unnecessary and undisclosed hysterectomies performed on Black women in the South so widespread it was coined the "Mississippi appendectomy." Eugenicists promoted anti-miscegenation laws and forced sterilization of those in prison and in poverty and of those with disabilities or mental illness. These practices have not died. In 2020, low-income immigrant women detained by ICE in Georgia were forcibly sterilized. As we hear rhetoric from the current administration about immigrants "poisoning the blood" of our country, it invites horrifying thoughts of what may be happening to immigrants currently being detained by ICE. Even more sinister, however, is a modern eugenics movement camouflaged by in vitro fertilization (IVF). IVF is increasingly popular, and rightfully so. Couples with fertility issues can conceive. Women can freeze eggs. Queer couples can have genetically related kids. IVF can also ostensibly prevent harm. IVF clinics might screen embryos for sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis, BRCA1, and Down syndrome. Things get confusing and uncomfortable, however, when we try to define what harms are worth preventing. In a world where whiteness and conventional beauty are tightly coupled with success, couldn't selecting for these features be a way to minimize a child's future suffering? Most sperm donor companies have a height minimum of 5'9". Harvard graduate egg and sperm donors are highly sought after. While it's hard to fault parents for wanting the best for their children, as a geneticist, it is concerning to me how much stock people put into the inheritance of such complex and environmentally influenced traits. With biotech companies explicitly offering genetic testing, I am even more concerned. Last October, Helios Genomics offered to boost a couple's future child's IQ via genetic screening. Nucleus Genomics recently took this a shocking step further by announcing it is offering genetic testing for traits like eye color, hair color, height, BMI, and IQ. Companies perform these screens with polygenic risk scoring, which makes use of genetic mutations identified from large scale population studies to be associated with a complex trait like intelligence. But these findings are just that: associations. We barely understand the true, context-dependent function of all the genes and mutations associated with complex traits. The idea that a company could confidently boast a six-point increase in a trait as socially and environmentally modified as intelligence is naïve at best and deceptive at worst. It also plays directly into the ideals of eugenics: that all social disparities and ailments are genetically determined, and that there is one correct way to be. Amid devastating cuts to everything from Medicaid to education, it is curious that one of the few spaces the Trump administration has pledged to increase federal funding is in vitro fertilization. Is this a random act of kindness amid an onslaught of cruelties? Or is it one of several strategies for breeding a homogenous generation of nationalistic Americans—ones with "good genes" and predetermined allegiances to the regime (thanks to $1,000 savings accounts established in their name from birth)? In this modern era of eugenics, as immigrants are expelled while neo-Nazis spew hateful theories of "great replacement," it is no wonder American Eagle felt bold enough to declare that Sydney Sweeney has great genes. America must reject this renewed, government-endorsed eugenics. Scientists must think deeply about ramifications: Just because we can, or think we can, does not mean we should. IVF companies should be barred from making false promises about the heritability of traits like intelligence, BMI, and hair color. While fatal diseases like breast cancer are fair to select against, prospective parents should think twice about what is lost when selecting for subjective social norms. We all have great genes and we all deserve a society that embraces us, that makes us feel whole, and bold, and beautiful—like a pair of great jeans. Tania Fabo, MSc is an MD-PhD candidate in genetics at Stanford University, a Rhodes scholar, a Knight-Hennessy scholar, a Paul and Daisy Soros fellow, and a Public Voices fellow of The OpEd Project. Her PhD research focuses on the interaction between genetics and diet in colorectal cancer risk. The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
US journalist who went missing for six days on Norwegian glacier hike rescued
The American journalist who vanished after venturing out for a solo hike along a glacier in Norway was found alive by a search and rescue crew six days after he went missing. Alec Luhn, a 38-year-old Wisconsin native, was found Wednesday and airlifted to a hospital after disappearing inside Norway's Folgefonna National Park on July 31, the local Red Cross branch said. 3 Alec Luhn, 38, was rescued on Wednesday after disappearing in Norway's Folgefonna National Park. Veronika Silchenko / Facebook The award-winning reporter was on vacation with his family when he set out on a multi-day trip to backpack across the national park. But he failed to meet back up with his relatives on Monday. Luhn's wife, Veronika Silchenko, said her husband was an experienced outdoorsman, so she wasn't initially worried when he failed to check in with them over the weekend. 3 Search and rescue efforts were called off two nights in a row this week due to dangerous weather. Norwegian Red Cross 'Alec is basically obsessed with the Arctic,' Silchenko, an Emmy-winning TV journalist, told CBS News. 'He loves glaciers and snow, and he loves explorers, and he's a climate journalist, so for him it is always that story that now because of the climate change they're all shrinking, and he's trying his best to go to the coldest countries,' she said. But when she still hadn't heard from him, she reported her husband missing, and local officials launched a search and rescue mission surrounding the Folgefonna glacier. 3 The weather let up on Wednesday and the search team was able to locate Luhn in the area and order an airlift. Norwegian Red Cross The search, however, ran into trouble when bad weather forced the team and their helicopter to suspend the operation Monday night. A volunteer search and rescue team, police, K-9 units and drones renewed the search on Tuesday before it was again suspended due to the weather. 'Difficult terrain, poor visibility, rain and high water levels have complicated access to key areas,' the Norwegian Red Cross said in a statement just a few hours before the crew found Luhn. 'He was located by helicopter crew and has now been transported for medical treatment,' the organization posted on X. Officials did not comment on what condition Luhn was in. Luhn, a graduate of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has reported for various outlets, including The Guardian, The New York Times, The Atlantic, National Geographic, Scientific American, TIME, CBS News Radio, and VICE News TV.


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
Dean Cain says he joined ICE ‘to help save America' in support of Trump's immigration crackdown
He's now the Man of ICE. Actor Dean Cain announced Tuesday that he joined US Immigration and Customs Enforcement to support President Trump's mass deportation efforts and 'help save America.' Cain, 59, who played Clark Kent on ABC's 'Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman' alongside Teri Hatcher's Lois Lane from 1993 to 1997, shared the shocking news in a recruitment-style video on social media while urging others to join him in booting illegal migrants from the country. Advertisement 4 Dean Cain, 59, announced Tuesday that he joined ICE to support Trump's immigration efforts. X/@RealDeanCain 'For those who don't know, I am a sworn law enforcement officer, as well as being a filmmaker, and I felt it was important to join with our first responders to help secure the safety of all Americans, not just talk about it, so I joined up,' the conservative media personality said in a nearly two-minute clip on X. 'Since President Trump took office, ICE has arrested hundreds of thousands of criminals including terrorists, rapists, murderers, pedophiles, MS-13 gang members, drug traffickers, you name it — very dangerous people are who are no longer on the streets.' Advertisement JOIN ICE!! We need your help to protect 🇺🇸 — Dean Cain (@RealDeanCain) August 5, 2025 The former 'Ripley's Believe It Or Not!' host went on to tout the agency's 'great benefits and pay,' along with a $50,000 signing bonus announced last week by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. He also boasted that no college degree is required, meaning 'you can get to work right away.' 'So if you want to help save America, ICE is arresting the worst of the worst and removing them from American's streets,' said Cain, who was sporting a black American Sniper tee. Advertisement 4 Cain said he joined to help first responders secure the safety of all Americans. X/@RealDeanCain 'I like that. I voted for that. They need your help, we need your help, to protect our homeland and our families. So check into it and join today if it's something that tickles your fancy because we can use you.' Commenters were quick to note that Cain is 22 years over the federal agency's maximum recruitment age of 37, casting doubt on the legitimacy of his latest public reveal. Cain, in response to one critic who snarked about the age limit, said 'Perhaps we'll get that changed…' Advertisement Another user chimed in, writing that 'Superman himself would be disappointed.' 4 ICE is seeking to recruit 10,000 new officers and agents with the passage of Trump's massive funding bill. AFP via Getty Images ICE did not immediately respond to The Post's request for comment regarding Cain's enlistment. The actor's endorsement comes a week after DHS launched 'Defend the Homeland,' a nationwide recruitment campaign aiming to hire 10,000 new agents following the passage of Trump's massive funding bill. The agency is offering a $50,000 signing bonus, student loan repayment and forgiveness options, enhanced retirement benefits and more to recruits and retired agents who return to service. 4 Cain said joining ICE will 'help save America.' Michael Brochstein/Zuma / 'Your country is calling you to serve at ICE,' Noem said in the July 29 announcement, blasting the Biden administration for its 'failed immigration policies.' 'This is a defining moment in our nation's history. Your skills, your experiences, and your courage have never been more essential. Together, we must defend the homeland.'