Many might associate Chicago-style pizza with the thick deep-dish versions offered at places like Pequod's in Lincoln Park with its rich, caramelized crust or Lou Malnati's, one of the more well-known chains; however, there's another style with a deeper history that's equally, if not more ubiquitous across The Windy City: We're talking about the thin and crispy Chicago tavern-style pizzas, and it's picking up popularity from coast-to-coast across America. For those unfamiliar, the Chicago tavern-style is identifiable by its cracker-thin crusts with toppings like fennel-forward sausage or spicy giardiniera along with cheese and sauce that's spread over the top edge-to-edge. Also notable is the way the pizza is often cut into small squares, perfect for picking up with a fork and enjoying with a nice ice cold beer. |
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More than 100 years after its creation, the OG remains the GOAT. |
| Another glaring example of how carefully manufactured the conservative majority on the Court really was. |
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There is, inside the hearts of baseball fans, an alarm bell that goes off every time someone tries to change the game. True, the alarm is not inside all baseball fans, but it's there for many of us, and it rings "Nooooooo!" whenever even the most subtle of changes to baseball is proposed. I don't know that this happens for any other game. For instance, a few years ago, the powers that be in baseball—in their never-ending and previously hapless efforts to speed up the game—ruled that pitchers no longer had to physically throw the four pitches when intentionally walking a batter. Well, going forward, the manager could just point to first base and the intentional walk was automatically issued. It is hard to imagine a more minor pronouncement, and yet because this is baseball, there was outrage, palpable outrage, as baseball fans (and I plead guilty) scanned baseball history to find instances when the four-pitch intentional walk had created a memorable moment. |
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You're not getting any younger, but you can look like you are. |
| This isn't the show that was once, not so long ago, the only hope for 'Star Wars.' |
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Peruse online support forums for men with porn addictions and you'll hear all kinds of harrowing tales from guys of all ages who claim their minds have been poisoned by pornography. Boys in their teens who spend their free time doing nothing but compulsively masturbating to online porn. Men in their sexual primes who can't get erections during sexual encounters with women because real-life sex doesn't compare to the hardcore pornography they've watched for years. Older men who claim porn negatively affected their relationships and stifled their personal growth. For the latest installment in our new series on The Secret Lives of Men, we spoke to George*, a successful professional—articulate, courteous, and mild-mannered—and a suburban father of three daughters. He doesn't seem like the kind of person to harbor a dysfunctional fascination with porn. But pornography consumed him for much of his life, and George says that, despite having kicked his porn habit, he is still in the grip of it. |
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