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    <atom:link href="https://feeds.megaphone.fm/FOXM6482057688" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/>
    <title>A Four Star Podcast (Chicago, but Better)</title>
    <link>https://www.fox32chicago.com/</link>
    <language>en</language>
    <copyright>2025 Fox 32 Chicago</copyright>
    <description>A Four Star Podcast is a new series from FOX Chicago built on a simple idea: our city’s biggest challenges shouldn't just be endless points of debate—they’re problems with practical, attainable solutions. Named for the stars on our municipal flag, the show acts as a filter for the usual civic noise. We're moving past the "Chicago politics" headlines to focus on the actual quality of life issues that affect us every day. 

Whether it's the reliability of the CTA, the safety of our streets, the health of our business climate, or the reality of the housing market, we’re looking at the nuts and bolts of how this city really functions.  

Our goal is common-sense progress over political gridlock. By sitting down with technical experts, boots-on-the-ground advocates, and industry insiders—the voices you don’t always see in the local news cycle—we’re deconstructing the hurdles that keep Chicago from reaching its full potential. We aren’t just here to point out what’s broken; we’re talking to the people who know how to fix it. This is a blueprint for a more functional, ambitious, and better Chicago.</description>
    <image>
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      <title>A Four Star Podcast (Chicago, but Better)</title>
      <link>https://www.fox32chicago.com/</link>
    </image>
    <itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type>
    <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
    <itunes:summary>A Four Star Podcast is a new series from FOX Chicago built on a simple idea: our city’s biggest challenges shouldn't just be endless points of debate—they’re problems with practical, attainable solutions. Named for the stars on our municipal flag, the show acts as a filter for the usual civic noise. We're moving past the "Chicago politics" headlines to focus on the actual quality of life issues that affect us every day. 

Whether it's the reliability of the CTA, the safety of our streets, the health of our business climate, or the reality of the housing market, we’re looking at the nuts and bolts of how this city really functions.  

Our goal is common-sense progress over political gridlock. By sitting down with technical experts, boots-on-the-ground advocates, and industry insiders—the voices you don’t always see in the local news cycle—we’re deconstructing the hurdles that keep Chicago from reaching its full potential. We aren’t just here to point out what’s broken; we’re talking to the people who know how to fix it. This is a blueprint for a more functional, ambitious, and better Chicago.</itunes:summary>
    <content:encoded>
      <![CDATA[<p>
A Four Star Podcast is a new series from FOX Chicago built on a simple idea: our city’s biggest challenges shouldn't just be endless points of debate—they’re problems with practical, attainable solutions. Named for the stars on our municipal flag, the show acts as a filter for the usual civic noise. We're moving past the "Chicago politics" headlines to focus on the actual quality of life issues that affect us every day. 

Whether it's the reliability of the CTA, the safety of our streets, the health of our business climate, or the reality of the housing market, we’re looking at the nuts and bolts of how this city really functions.  

Our goal is common-sense progress over political gridlock. By sitting down with technical experts, boots-on-the-ground advocates, and industry insiders—the voices you don’t always see in the local news cycle—we’re deconstructing the hurdles that keep Chicago from reaching its full potential. We aren’t just here to point out what’s broken; we’re talking to the people who know how to fix it. This is a blueprint for a more functional, ambitious, and better Chicago.</p>]]>
    </content:encoded>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Fox Audio Network</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>podcasts@fox.com</itunes:email>
    </itunes:owner>
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    <itunes:category text="News">
      <itunes:category text="News Commentary"/>
    </itunes:category>
    <item>
      <title>The danger of being a Chicago cyclist</title>
      <description>Riley O’Neil’s death hit Chicago’s safe-streets community especially hard. He was not just a cyclist. He was a CDOT planner who worked on making streets safer before he was killed while biking in Bridgeport.

In this episode of A Four Star Podcast, Grant Horne talks with John Greenfield of Streetsblog Chicago about Riley’s life, his work, and what his death says about the way Chicago designs, debates, and prioritizes its streets.

But Riley’s story is only the beginning.

The conversation widens into a bigger look at Chicago transportation: the limits of paint-only bike lanes, the politics of protected infrastructure, the fight over parking and curb space, new express bus lane proposals, e-bike legislation, and what the CTA needs from its new leadership. Greenfield also shares his impressions from visiting the Obama Presidential Center site as the city prepares for its opening, and what that major South Side destination could mean for transit, biking, walking, tourism, and neighborhood access.

It is a conversation about bikes, buses, trains, traffic, and development. More than that, it is about whether Chicago can build a transportation system that is safer, faster, more reliable, and more humane.

From Riley’s legacy to the future of the CTA, this episode asks a simple question with complicated answers: how should Chicago move?




https://x.com/streetsblogchi
https://bsky.app/profile/chi.streetsblog.org
https://chi.streetsblog.org/

00:00 Coming up: Riley and Chicago’s streets
00:25 John Greenfield joins the show
02:30 Riley O’Neil’s story
07:30 A safe-streets planner killed biking
12:30 Dooring, bike lanes, and street design
18:30 Paint versus protection
24:30 Memorial rides and policy pressure
30:00 The broader transportation fight
34:00 Express bus lanes
40:00 Chicago’s e-bike debate
46:00 A new leader for CTA
53:00 What riders need now
59:00 Visiting the Obama Center
1:06:00 Transit, access, and the South Side
1:12:00 How Chicago should move




Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 11:00:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://megaphone.imgix.net/podcasts/e110c148-6ec0-11f1-b800-031f6ebd0976/image/7c94ec9d0980caaf96241edac7a12953.jpg?ixlib=rails-4.3.1&amp;max-w=3000&amp;max-h=3000&amp;fit=crop&amp;auto=format,compress"/>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Riley O’Neil’s death hit Chicago’s safe-streets community especially hard. He was not just a cyclist. He was a CDOT planner who worked on making streets safer before he was killed while biking in Bridgeport.

In this episode of A Four Star Podcast, Grant Horne talks with John Greenfield of Streetsblog Chicago about Riley’s life, his work, and what his death says about the way Chicago designs, debates, and prioritizes its streets.

But Riley’s story is only the beginning.

The conversation widens into a bigger look at Chicago transportation: the limits of paint-only bike lanes, the politics of protected infrastructure, the fight over parking and curb space, new express bus lane proposals, e-bike legislation, and what the CTA needs from its new leadership. Greenfield also shares his impressions from visiting the Obama Presidential Center site as the city prepares for its opening, and what that major South Side destination could mean for transit, biking, walking, tourism, and neighborhood access.

It is a conversation about bikes, buses, trains, traffic, and development. More than that, it is about whether Chicago can build a transportation system that is safer, faster, more reliable, and more humane.

From Riley’s legacy to the future of the CTA, this episode asks a simple question with complicated answers: how should Chicago move?




https://x.com/streetsblogchi
https://bsky.app/profile/chi.streetsblog.org
https://chi.streetsblog.org/

00:00 Coming up: Riley and Chicago’s streets
00:25 John Greenfield joins the show
02:30 Riley O’Neil’s story
07:30 A safe-streets planner killed biking
12:30 Dooring, bike lanes, and street design
18:30 Paint versus protection
24:30 Memorial rides and policy pressure
30:00 The broader transportation fight
34:00 Express bus lanes
40:00 Chicago’s e-bike debate
46:00 A new leader for CTA
53:00 What riders need now
59:00 Visiting the Obama Center
1:06:00 Transit, access, and the South Side
1:12:00 How Chicago should move




Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Riley O’Neil’s death hit Chicago’s safe-streets community especially hard. He was not just a cyclist. He was a CDOT planner who worked on making streets safer before he was killed while biking in Bridgeport.</p>
<p>In this episode of <strong>A Four Star Podcast</strong>, Grant Horne talks with <strong>John Greenfield</strong> of <strong>Streetsblog Chicago</strong> about Riley’s life, his work, and what his death says about the way Chicago designs, debates, and prioritizes its streets.</p>
<p>But Riley’s story is only the beginning.</p>
<p>The conversation widens into a bigger look at Chicago transportation: the limits of paint-only bike lanes, the politics of protected infrastructure, the fight over parking and curb space, new express bus lane proposals, e-bike legislation, and what the CTA needs from its new leadership. Greenfield also shares his impressions from visiting the Obama Presidential Center site as the city prepares for its opening, and what that major South Side destination could mean for transit, biking, walking, tourism, and neighborhood access.</p>
<p>It is a conversation about bikes, buses, trains, traffic, and development. More than that, it is about whether Chicago can build a transportation system that is safer, faster, more reliable, and more humane.</p>
<p>From Riley’s legacy to the future of the CTA, this episode asks a simple question with complicated answers: how should Chicago move?</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>
https://x.com/streetsblogchi
https://bsky.app/profile/chi.streetsblog.org
https://chi.streetsblog.org/

00:00 Coming up: Riley and Chicago’s streets
00:25 John Greenfield joins the show
02:30 Riley O’Neil’s story
07:30 A safe-streets planner killed biking
12:30 Dooring, bike lanes, and street design
18:30 Paint versus protection
24:30 Memorial rides and policy pressure
30:00 The broader transportation fight
34:00 Express bus lanes
40:00 Chicago’s e-bike debate
46:00 A new leader for CTA
53:00 What riders need now
59:00 Visiting the Obama Center
1:06:00 Transit, access, and the South Side
1:12:00 How Chicago should move



</p><p> </p><p>Learn more about your ad choices. Visit <a href="https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices">podcastchoices.com/adchoices</a></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>3984</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[e110c148-6ec0-11f1-b800-031f6ebd0976]]></guid>
      <enclosure url="https://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/pdst.fm/e/traffic.megaphone.fm/FOXM2517542785.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Raise Hell, Then Leave: The Lightfoot Legacy</title>
      <description>Lori Lightfoot stormed into City Hall with a historic mandate, a reformer’s promise, and a landslide victory that seemed to signal a new era in Chicago politics.

Four years later, she became the first Chicago mayor in decades to lose reelection.

In this special vacation-week episode of A Four Star Podcast, Grant is on break, so we’re sharing his April 2024 interview with Chicago Tribune reporter Gregory Royal Pratt, author of The City Is Up for Grabs: How Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot Led and Lost a City in Crisis. The conversation originally aired as part of the Fox 32 feature Raise Hell, Then Leave: The Lightfoot Legacy.

Pratt walks through Lightfoot’s rise, her reformer image, her fractured relationships inside City Hall, her complicated approach to policing, her COVID-era leadership, and the political instincts that made her both unforgettable and isolated.

It’s a look back at one of the strangest, sharpest, most consequential mayoral terms in modern Chicago history, and what Lightfoot’s legacy looks like now as Brandon Johnson faces his own political headwinds.



00:00 Raise Hell, Then Leave

01:08 Greg Royal Pratt on Lightfoot

01:33 The Mini Mayor

02:41 Lori the Reformer

05:38 The Landslide

07:48 The Fighter in City Hall

10:01 Lightfoot, Police, and Trust

14:38 Police Reform’s Missed Opportunity

16:34 Lightfoot and COVID

19:02 A Leader Alone

20:32 Covering Lori Lightfoot

22:36 Is There a Legacy?

24:27 Brandon Johnson and Lightfoot’s View




Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 16 Jun 2026 11:00:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://megaphone.imgix.net/podcasts/d680f446-6934-11f1-91e1-9fbb895a1585/image/0e971c87b0c3c2312df6898388dc778a.png?ixlib=rails-4.3.1&amp;max-w=3000&amp;max-h=3000&amp;fit=crop&amp;auto=format,compress"/>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Lori Lightfoot stormed into City Hall with a historic mandate, a reformer’s promise, and a landslide victory that seemed to signal a new era in Chicago politics.

Four years later, she became the first Chicago mayor in decades to lose reelection.

In this special vacation-week episode of A Four Star Podcast, Grant is on break, so we’re sharing his April 2024 interview with Chicago Tribune reporter Gregory Royal Pratt, author of The City Is Up for Grabs: How Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot Led and Lost a City in Crisis. The conversation originally aired as part of the Fox 32 feature Raise Hell, Then Leave: The Lightfoot Legacy.

Pratt walks through Lightfoot’s rise, her reformer image, her fractured relationships inside City Hall, her complicated approach to policing, her COVID-era leadership, and the political instincts that made her both unforgettable and isolated.

It’s a look back at one of the strangest, sharpest, most consequential mayoral terms in modern Chicago history, and what Lightfoot’s legacy looks like now as Brandon Johnson faces his own political headwinds.



00:00 Raise Hell, Then Leave

01:08 Greg Royal Pratt on Lightfoot

01:33 The Mini Mayor

02:41 Lori the Reformer

05:38 The Landslide

07:48 The Fighter in City Hall

10:01 Lightfoot, Police, and Trust

14:38 Police Reform’s Missed Opportunity

16:34 Lightfoot and COVID

19:02 A Leader Alone

20:32 Covering Lori Lightfoot

22:36 Is There a Legacy?

24:27 Brandon Johnson and Lightfoot’s View




Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Lori Lightfoot stormed into City Hall with a historic mandate, a reformer’s promise, and a landslide victory that seemed to signal a new era in Chicago politics.</p>
<p>Four years later, she became the first Chicago mayor in decades to lose reelection.</p>
<p>In this special vacation-week episode of A Four Star Podcast, Grant is on break, so we’re sharing his April 2024 interview with Chicago Tribune reporter Gregory Royal Pratt, author of The City Is Up for Grabs: How Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot Led and Lost a City in Crisis. The conversation originally aired as part of the Fox 32 feature Raise Hell, Then Leave: The Lightfoot Legacy.</p>
<p>Pratt walks through Lightfoot’s rise, her reformer image, her fractured relationships inside City Hall, her complicated approach to policing, her COVID-era leadership, and the political instincts that made her both unforgettable and isolated.</p>
<p>It’s a look back at one of the strangest, sharpest, most consequential mayoral terms in modern Chicago history, and what Lightfoot’s legacy looks like now as Brandon Johnson faces his own political headwinds.</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>00:00 Raise Hell, Then Leave</p>
<p>01:08 Greg Royal Pratt on Lightfoot</p>
<p>01:33 The Mini Mayor</p>
<p>02:41 Lori the Reformer</p>
<p>05:38 The Landslide</p>
<p>07:48 The Fighter in City Hall</p>
<p>10:01 Lightfoot, Police, and Trust</p>
<p>14:38 Police Reform’s Missed Opportunity</p>
<p>16:34 Lightfoot and COVID</p>
<p>19:02 A Leader Alone</p>
<p>20:32 Covering Lori Lightfoot</p>
<p>22:36 Is There a Legacy?</p>
<p>24:27 Brandon Johnson and Lightfoot’s View

</p>
<p><br></p><p> </p><p>Learn more about your ad choices. Visit <a href="https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices">podcastchoices.com/adchoices</a></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>1601</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Chicago killed ShotSpotter. The argument still lives.</title>
      <description>Chicago ended ShotSpotter. Then came the studies, the headlines, the political victory laps, and a much bigger question:



What did the data actually prove?



On this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, Grant Horne is joined by Richard Day, journalist with A City That Works, for a deeper look at Chicago’s ongoing fight over gunshot detection technology, police response times, public safety data, and the way city leaders and media outlets interpret numbers when the politics are already loaded.



The conversation centers on a recent report that some used to argue Mayor Brandon Johnson was right to cancel ShotSpotter. But Richard explains why the study may not answer the question many people think it answers - especially if it measures non-shooting 911 response times while leaving out the core concern: how police respond when gunfire actually happens.



Grant and Richard also dig into the bigger debate behind the technology: whether Chicago wants police rapidly responding to gunfire in high-violence neighborhoods at all, whether ShotSpotter was used properly by CPD, and what should replace it if the city believes the system was flawed.



Along the way, they discuss dispatch clog, seasonality, media framing, the Adam Toledo case, violence interrupters, proactive policing, underreported crime, the Ferguson effect, Chicago’s open data problems, and why the city’s fiscal crisis and public safety crisis may be more connected than people want to admit.



This is not a simple “ShotSpotter good” or “ShotSpotter bad” conversation. It’s about what Chicago knows, what it doesn’t know, and what happens when public safety policy gets built on partial evidence.



A Four Star Podcast - Chicago, but better. A new episode Tuesday mornings at 6AM. Get it on YouTube or your favorite podcatcher.



A City That Works Substack:  https://citythatworks.substack.com/

Richard Day on X: https://x.com/richsday



Chapters



00:00 The media is bad at math

03:20 What City Hall claimed

06:24 Catching shooters or saving victims?

10:25 Should police respond fast?

12:19 Dispatch clog and alert accuracy

16:05 Response times and misleading conclusions

20:16 Seasonality and crime drops

23:31 Underreported crime

26:19 Police pullback

28:25 Ideology and crime coverage

33:13 Technology and policing costs

37:03 Replacing ShotSpotter

38:54 Adam Toledo and civil rights

43:34 Violence interrupters

45:37 Mayor Johnson and data

47:00 Chicago’s open data problem

49:14 Violence and pensions

50:47 A City That Works
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jun 2026 11:00:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://megaphone.imgix.net/podcasts/52ea4236-63b2-11f1-9f20-4beb88461940/image/cc39ac1eb808bc594daac6b21aba5c8a.jpg?ixlib=rails-4.3.1&amp;max-w=3000&amp;max-h=3000&amp;fit=crop&amp;auto=format,compress"/>
      <itunes:subtitle>You can't get bad guys with bad data.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Chicago ended ShotSpotter. Then came the studies, the headlines, the political victory laps, and a much bigger question:



What did the data actually prove?



On this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, Grant Horne is joined by Richard Day, journalist with A City That Works, for a deeper look at Chicago’s ongoing fight over gunshot detection technology, police response times, public safety data, and the way city leaders and media outlets interpret numbers when the politics are already loaded.



The conversation centers on a recent report that some used to argue Mayor Brandon Johnson was right to cancel ShotSpotter. But Richard explains why the study may not answer the question many people think it answers - especially if it measures non-shooting 911 response times while leaving out the core concern: how police respond when gunfire actually happens.



Grant and Richard also dig into the bigger debate behind the technology: whether Chicago wants police rapidly responding to gunfire in high-violence neighborhoods at all, whether ShotSpotter was used properly by CPD, and what should replace it if the city believes the system was flawed.



Along the way, they discuss dispatch clog, seasonality, media framing, the Adam Toledo case, violence interrupters, proactive policing, underreported crime, the Ferguson effect, Chicago’s open data problems, and why the city’s fiscal crisis and public safety crisis may be more connected than people want to admit.



This is not a simple “ShotSpotter good” or “ShotSpotter bad” conversation. It’s about what Chicago knows, what it doesn’t know, and what happens when public safety policy gets built on partial evidence.



A Four Star Podcast - Chicago, but better. A new episode Tuesday mornings at 6AM. Get it on YouTube or your favorite podcatcher.



A City That Works Substack:  https://citythatworks.substack.com/

Richard Day on X: https://x.com/richsday



Chapters



00:00 The media is bad at math

03:20 What City Hall claimed

06:24 Catching shooters or saving victims?

10:25 Should police respond fast?

12:19 Dispatch clog and alert accuracy

16:05 Response times and misleading conclusions

20:16 Seasonality and crime drops

23:31 Underreported crime

26:19 Police pullback

28:25 Ideology and crime coverage

33:13 Technology and policing costs

37:03 Replacing ShotSpotter

38:54 Adam Toledo and civil rights

43:34 Violence interrupters

45:37 Mayor Johnson and data

47:00 Chicago’s open data problem

49:14 Violence and pensions

50:47 A City That Works
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Chicago ended ShotSpotter. Then came the studies, the headlines, the political victory laps, and a much bigger question:</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>What did the data actually prove?</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>On this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, Grant Horne is joined by Richard Day, journalist with A City That Works, for a deeper look at Chicago’s ongoing fight over gunshot detection technology, police response times, public safety data, and the way city leaders and media outlets interpret numbers when the politics are already loaded.</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>The conversation centers on a recent report that some used to argue Mayor Brandon Johnson was right to cancel ShotSpotter. But Richard explains why the study may not answer the question many people think it answers - especially if it measures non-shooting 911 response times while leaving out the core concern: how police respond when gunfire actually happens.</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>Grant and Richard also dig into the bigger debate behind the technology: whether Chicago wants police rapidly responding to gunfire in high-violence neighborhoods at all, whether ShotSpotter was used properly by CPD, and what should replace it if the city believes the system was flawed.</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>Along the way, they discuss dispatch clog, seasonality, media framing, the Adam Toledo case, violence interrupters, proactive policing, underreported crime, the Ferguson effect, Chicago’s open data problems, and why the city’s fiscal crisis and public safety crisis may be more connected than people want to admit.</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>This is not a simple “ShotSpotter good” or “ShotSpotter bad” conversation. It’s about what Chicago knows, what it doesn’t know, and what happens when public safety policy gets built on partial evidence.</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>A Four Star Podcast - Chicago, but better. A new episode Tuesday mornings at 6AM. Get it on YouTube or your favorite podcatcher.</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>A City That Works Substack:  https://citythatworks.substack.com/</p>
<p>Richard Day on X: https://x.com/richsday</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>Chapters</p>
<p><br></p>
<p>00:00 The media is bad at math</p>
<p>03:20 What City Hall claimed</p>
<p>06:24 Catching shooters or saving victims?</p>
<p>10:25 Should police respond fast?</p>
<p>12:19 Dispatch clog and alert accuracy</p>
<p>16:05 Response times and misleading conclusions</p>
<p>20:16 Seasonality and crime drops</p>
<p>23:31 Underreported crime</p>
<p>26:19 Police pullback</p>
<p>28:25 Ideology and crime coverage</p>
<p>33:13 Technology and policing costs</p>
<p>37:03 Replacing ShotSpotter</p>
<p>38:54 Adam Toledo and civil rights</p>
<p>43:34 Violence interrupters</p>
<p>45:37 Mayor Johnson and data</p>
<p>47:00 Chicago’s open data problem</p>
<p>49:14 Violence and pensions</p>
<p>50:47 A City That Works</p><p> </p><p>Learn more about your ad choices. Visit <a href="https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices">podcastchoices.com/adchoices</a></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>3156</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[52ea4236-63b2-11f1-9f20-4beb88461940]]></guid>
      <enclosure url="https://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/pdst.fm/e/traffic.megaphone.fm/FOXM4135670998.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>When the mob becomes the norm</title>
      <description>Former Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy says Chicago needs to stop calling them “teen takeovers.”

To him, that language softens what is actually happening: mob actions. Criminal behavior. Disorder that can include shootings, assaults, weapons arrests, property damage, attacks on police, and large crowds taking over public spaces.

In this episode of A Four Star Podcast, McCarthy joins FOX Chicago's Grant Horne for a blunt conversation about summer policing in Chicago, downtown chaos, the fear of crime, and why he believes city leaders, the justice system, parents, and police all have a role in restoring accountability.

The conversation begins with Memorial Day weekend and the familiar start of Chicago’s summer crime concerns, then expands into a deeper debate over public safety, quality-of-life enforcement, curfews, social media-fueled gatherings, police deployment, officer morale, and whether the city is giving police the tools and support they need.

McCarthy also explains why he believes fear of crime is about more than crime stats. It is what people feel walking to the train, visiting downtown, going to the lakefront, or seeing disorder go unchecked. He draws on his experience in New York, Newark, and Chicago to argue that the small things matter because unchecked disorder can send a message that the big things will be tolerated too.

This is a conversation about language, leadership, policing, accountability, and whether Chicago can keep its summers from becoming an annual stress test for the city.

A Four Star Podcast is new every Tuesday morning at 6AM.


00:00 - Summer policing begins01:17 - “Teen takeover” or mob action?02:54 - Fear of crime04:49 - Quality-of-life policing07:59 - Accountability and excuses09:17 - History and hard conversations11:40 - Policing across racial lines14:47 - Naming the problem16:29 - Police under pressure18:14 - Victims and public safety19:19 - Judges and accountability21:12 - What officers face22:40 - The Adam Toledo case25:10 - When police stop engaging27:35 - Moving cops downtown28:35 - Task forces vs. districts30:52 - Policing the beaches32:04 - Social media and flash mobs34:15 - Should parents be cited?36:39 - Teaching no accountability39:04 - Defining fear of crime41:23 - The squeegee men43:32 - D.C.’s curfew response45:43 - Could Chicago pass new laws?46:22 - Guns, politics, and moderation49:43 - Beyond the police50:37 - What McCarthy would change52:04 - Politics inside policing54:00 - McCarthy’s CPD record55:04 - Closing thoughts






Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2026 11:00:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://megaphone.imgix.net/podcasts/a62959fe-5e3b-11f1-b2db-6fcc0097bb59/image/c75606732ed09ca44c49c3be912d4081.jpg?ixlib=rails-4.3.1&amp;max-w=3000&amp;max-h=3000&amp;fit=crop&amp;auto=format,compress"/>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Former Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy says Chicago needs to stop calling them “teen takeovers.”

To him, that language softens what is actually happening: mob actions. Criminal behavior. Disorder that can include shootings, assaults, weapons arrests, property damage, attacks on police, and large crowds taking over public spaces.

In this episode of A Four Star Podcast, McCarthy joins FOX Chicago's Grant Horne for a blunt conversation about summer policing in Chicago, downtown chaos, the fear of crime, and why he believes city leaders, the justice system, parents, and police all have a role in restoring accountability.

The conversation begins with Memorial Day weekend and the familiar start of Chicago’s summer crime concerns, then expands into a deeper debate over public safety, quality-of-life enforcement, curfews, social media-fueled gatherings, police deployment, officer morale, and whether the city is giving police the tools and support they need.

McCarthy also explains why he believes fear of crime is about more than crime stats. It is what people feel walking to the train, visiting downtown, going to the lakefront, or seeing disorder go unchecked. He draws on his experience in New York, Newark, and Chicago to argue that the small things matter because unchecked disorder can send a message that the big things will be tolerated too.

This is a conversation about language, leadership, policing, accountability, and whether Chicago can keep its summers from becoming an annual stress test for the city.

A Four Star Podcast is new every Tuesday morning at 6AM.


00:00 - Summer policing begins01:17 - “Teen takeover” or mob action?02:54 - Fear of crime04:49 - Quality-of-life policing07:59 - Accountability and excuses09:17 - History and hard conversations11:40 - Policing across racial lines14:47 - Naming the problem16:29 - Police under pressure18:14 - Victims and public safety19:19 - Judges and accountability21:12 - What officers face22:40 - The Adam Toledo case25:10 - When police stop engaging27:35 - Moving cops downtown28:35 - Task forces vs. districts30:52 - Policing the beaches32:04 - Social media and flash mobs34:15 - Should parents be cited?36:39 - Teaching no accountability39:04 - Defining fear of crime41:23 - The squeegee men43:32 - D.C.’s curfew response45:43 - Could Chicago pass new laws?46:22 - Guns, politics, and moderation49:43 - Beyond the police50:37 - What McCarthy would change52:04 - Politics inside policing54:00 - McCarthy’s CPD record55:04 - Closing thoughts






Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Former Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy says Chicago needs to stop calling them “teen takeovers.”</p>
<p>To him, that language softens what is actually happening: mob actions. Criminal behavior. Disorder that can include shootings, assaults, weapons arrests, property damage, attacks on police, and large crowds taking over public spaces.</p>
<p>In this episode of <em>A Four Star Podcast</em>, McCarthy joins FOX Chicago's Grant Horne for a blunt conversation about summer policing in Chicago, downtown chaos, the fear of crime, and why he believes city leaders, the justice system, parents, and police all have a role in restoring accountability.</p>
<p>The conversation begins with Memorial Day weekend and the familiar start of Chicago’s summer crime concerns, then expands into a deeper debate over public safety, quality-of-life enforcement, curfews, social media-fueled gatherings, police deployment, officer morale, and whether the city is giving police the tools and support they need.</p>
<p>McCarthy also explains why he believes fear of crime is about more than crime stats. It is what people feel walking to the train, visiting downtown, going to the lakefront, or seeing disorder go unchecked. He draws on his experience in New York, Newark, and Chicago to argue that the small things matter because unchecked disorder can send a message that the big things will be tolerated too.</p>
<p>This is a conversation about language, leadership, policing, accountability, and whether Chicago can keep its summers from becoming an annual stress test for the city.</p>
<p>A Four Star Podcast is new every Tuesday morning at 6AM.</p>
<p>
00:00 - Summer policing begins<br>01:17 - “Teen takeover” or mob action?<br>02:54 - Fear of crime<br>04:49 - Quality-of-life policing<br>07:59 - Accountability and excuses<br>09:17 - History and hard conversations<br>11:40 - Policing across racial lines<br>14:47 - Naming the problem<br>16:29 - Police under pressure<br>18:14 - Victims and public safety<br>19:19 - Judges and accountability<br>21:12 - What officers face<br>22:40 - The Adam Toledo case<br>25:10 - When police stop engaging<br>27:35 - Moving cops downtown<br>28:35 - Task forces vs. districts<br>30:52 - Policing the beaches<br>32:04 - Social media and flash mobs<br>34:15 - Should parents be cited?<br>36:39 - Teaching no accountability<br>39:04 - Defining fear of crime<br>41:23 - The squeegee men<br>43:32 - D.C.’s curfew response<br>45:43 - Could Chicago pass new laws?<br>46:22 - Guns, politics, and moderation<br>49:43 - Beyond the police<br>50:37 - What McCarthy would change<br>52:04 - Politics inside policing<br>54:00 - McCarthy’s CPD record<br>55:04 - Closing thoughts

</p>
<p>

</p><p> </p><p>Learn more about your ad choices. Visit <a href="https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices">podcastchoices.com/adchoices</a></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>3397</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[a62959fe-5e3b-11f1-b2db-6fcc0097bb59]]></guid>
      <enclosure url="https://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/pdst.fm/e/traffic.megaphone.fm/FOXM1724213602.mp3?updated=1780375846" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>You're not actually stealing from Jeff Bezos</title>
      <description>When a neighborhood store closes, the argument usually starts fast.

Activists blame corporate greed. Retailers point to theft. Residents are left with fewer places to buy groceries, fill prescriptions or pick up the basics.

In this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, we talk with Robert Karr, President and CEO of the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, about the pressures facing brick-and-mortar retail in Chicago and across Illinois.

The conversation starts with the recent Walgreens closing in Chatham, then opens up into a larger discussion about shoplifting, organized retail crime, pharmacy reimbursement, property taxes, government mandates, municipal grocery stores and the complicated math behind keeping stores open in underserved neighborhoods.

Karr argues that retail theft is not a victimless crime. Every stolen item affects sales tax revenue, store employees, managers, local governments and the neighborhoods that depend on those stores. He also explains why some large retailers may no longer be willing to subsidize underperforming locations the way they once did.

Later, we turn focus to part of a viral conversation featuring Hasan Piker about whether stealing from major corporations can be justified as a political or social statement. Karr calls that thinking uninformed and dangerous, arguing that it ignores the real-world consequences for workers, customers and communities.

The episode closes with a second retail voice: Our host's dad, a retired retail manager and district manager who spent decades dealing with shrinkage, store safety, employee theft, customer service and the brutal bottom-line reality of whether a store survives.

History lesson: Retail theft used to be treated largely as a store-level management problem. Shrinkage, employee theft, customer shoplifting and loss prevention were part of the basic retail math. But in recent years, organized retail crime, online resale markets, changing prosecution policies and political fights over store closures have turned it into a much bigger civic issue. In Chicago, that means the future of retail is not just about shopping. It is about neighborhood stability, public safety, tax revenue and whether basic services can remain within reach.

Illinois Retail Merchants Association:  https://irma.org/
Illinois Organized Retail Crime Association: https://ilorca.org/

00:00 Cold open: Retail theft, politics and store closures
00:59 Who is Robert Karr?
01:22 Brick-and-mortar temperature check
03:54 Walgreens, Chatham and the politics of store closures
10:23 Why pharmacies are under pressure
12:25 Should cities run grocery stores?
17:45 Illinois, Chicago and the cost of doing business
21:18 How local government affects retail
23:14 Why retail theft is not victimless
24:27 Prosecution, cash bail and the pendulum swing
28:01 What organized retail crime looks like inside a store
30:27 How theft changes the shopping experience
32:37 Could stores become pickup windows?
34:51 The human cost for managers and employees
37:31 Stealing as political signaling
41:21 Robert Karr responds to Hasan Piker's viral shoplifting argument
44:06 Can young consumers be educated on retail theft?
46:42 Illinois’ Organized Retail Crime Act
49:19 Technology, enforcement and the future of retail security
50:12 Where to follow the issue
51:19 A second retail expert: Grant’s dad
53:24 Shrinkage from a store manager’s perspective
56:25 Why customer service prevents theft
57:23 The rise of undercover loss prevention
58:19 Managing stores in high-theft neighborhoods
01:02:40 Why stores actually close
01:04:14 When subsidizing problem stores stops making sense
01:06:18 Prosecuting every shoplifter
01:07:27 Advice for today’s retail managers
01:08:20 Family photos, old stores and disposable cameras

A Four Star Podcast is new every Tuesday morning at 6.


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</description>
      <pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 11:00:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://megaphone.imgix.net/podcasts/b7dcdb96-58b2-11f1-96cd-8716bcc00f0d/image/227857691daa2d73aca334615b64b3c2.png?ixlib=rails-4.3.1&amp;max-w=3000&amp;max-h=3000&amp;fit=crop&amp;auto=format,compress"/>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>When a neighborhood store closes, the argument usually starts fast.

Activists blame corporate greed. Retailers point to theft. Residents are left with fewer places to buy groceries, fill prescriptions or pick up the basics.

In this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, we talk with Robert Karr, President and CEO of the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, about the pressures facing brick-and-mortar retail in Chicago and across Illinois.

The conversation starts with the recent Walgreens closing in Chatham, then opens up into a larger discussion about shoplifting, organized retail crime, pharmacy reimbursement, property taxes, government mandates, municipal grocery stores and the complicated math behind keeping stores open in underserved neighborhoods.

Karr argues that retail theft is not a victimless crime. Every stolen item affects sales tax revenue, store employees, managers, local governments and the neighborhoods that depend on those stores. He also explains why some large retailers may no longer be willing to subsidize underperforming locations the way they once did.

Later, we turn focus to part of a viral conversation featuring Hasan Piker about whether stealing from major corporations can be justified as a political or social statement. Karr calls that thinking uninformed and dangerous, arguing that it ignores the real-world consequences for workers, customers and communities.

The episode closes with a second retail voice: Our host's dad, a retired retail manager and district manager who spent decades dealing with shrinkage, store safety, employee theft, customer service and the brutal bottom-line reality of whether a store survives.

History lesson: Retail theft used to be treated largely as a store-level management problem. Shrinkage, employee theft, customer shoplifting and loss prevention were part of the basic retail math. But in recent years, organized retail crime, online resale markets, changing prosecution policies and political fights over store closures have turned it into a much bigger civic issue. In Chicago, that means the future of retail is not just about shopping. It is about neighborhood stability, public safety, tax revenue and whether basic services can remain within reach.

Illinois Retail Merchants Association:  https://irma.org/
Illinois Organized Retail Crime Association: https://ilorca.org/

00:00 Cold open: Retail theft, politics and store closures
00:59 Who is Robert Karr?
01:22 Brick-and-mortar temperature check
03:54 Walgreens, Chatham and the politics of store closures
10:23 Why pharmacies are under pressure
12:25 Should cities run grocery stores?
17:45 Illinois, Chicago and the cost of doing business
21:18 How local government affects retail
23:14 Why retail theft is not victimless
24:27 Prosecution, cash bail and the pendulum swing
28:01 What organized retail crime looks like inside a store
30:27 How theft changes the shopping experience
32:37 Could stores become pickup windows?
34:51 The human cost for managers and employees
37:31 Stealing as political signaling
41:21 Robert Karr responds to Hasan Piker's viral shoplifting argument
44:06 Can young consumers be educated on retail theft?
46:42 Illinois’ Organized Retail Crime Act
49:19 Technology, enforcement and the future of retail security
50:12 Where to follow the issue
51:19 A second retail expert: Grant’s dad
53:24 Shrinkage from a store manager’s perspective
56:25 Why customer service prevents theft
57:23 The rise of undercover loss prevention
58:19 Managing stores in high-theft neighborhoods
01:02:40 Why stores actually close
01:04:14 When subsidizing problem stores stops making sense
01:06:18 Prosecuting every shoplifter
01:07:27 Advice for today’s retail managers
01:08:20 Family photos, old stores and disposable cameras

A Four Star Podcast is new every Tuesday morning at 6.


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>When a neighborhood store closes, the argument usually starts fast.

Activists blame corporate greed. Retailers point to theft. Residents are left with fewer places to buy groceries, fill prescriptions or pick up the basics.

In this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, we talk with Robert Karr, President and CEO of the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, about the pressures facing brick-and-mortar retail in Chicago and across Illinois.

The conversation starts with the recent Walgreens closing in Chatham, then opens up into a larger discussion about shoplifting, organized retail crime, pharmacy reimbursement, property taxes, government mandates, municipal grocery stores and the complicated math behind keeping stores open in underserved neighborhoods.

Karr argues that retail theft is not a victimless crime. Every stolen item affects sales tax revenue, store employees, managers, local governments and the neighborhoods that depend on those stores. He also explains why some large retailers may no longer be willing to subsidize underperforming locations the way they once did.

Later, we turn focus to part of a viral conversation featuring Hasan Piker about whether stealing from major corporations can be justified as a political or social statement. Karr calls that thinking uninformed and dangerous, arguing that it ignores the real-world consequences for workers, customers and communities.

The episode closes with a second retail voice: Our host's dad, a retired retail manager and district manager who spent decades dealing with shrinkage, store safety, employee theft, customer service and the brutal bottom-line reality of whether a store survives.

History lesson: Retail theft used to be treated largely as a store-level management problem. Shrinkage, employee theft, customer shoplifting and loss prevention were part of the basic retail math. But in recent years, organized retail crime, online resale markets, changing prosecution policies and political fights over store closures have turned it into a much bigger civic issue. In Chicago, that means the future of retail is not just about shopping. It is about neighborhood stability, public safety, tax revenue and whether basic services can remain within reach.

Illinois Retail Merchants Association:  https://irma.org/
Illinois Organized Retail Crime Association: https://ilorca.org/

00:00 Cold open: Retail theft, politics and store closures
00:59 Who is Robert Karr?
01:22 Brick-and-mortar temperature check
03:54 Walgreens, Chatham and the politics of store closures
10:23 Why pharmacies are under pressure
12:25 Should cities run grocery stores?
17:45 Illinois, Chicago and the cost of doing business
21:18 How local government affects retail
23:14 Why retail theft is not victimless
24:27 Prosecution, cash bail and the pendulum swing
28:01 What organized retail crime looks like inside a store
30:27 How theft changes the shopping experience
32:37 Could stores become pickup windows?
34:51 The human cost for managers and employees
37:31 Stealing as political signaling
41:21 Robert Karr responds to Hasan Piker's viral shoplifting argument
44:06 Can young consumers be educated on retail theft?
46:42 Illinois’ Organized Retail Crime Act
49:19 Technology, enforcement and the future of retail security
50:12 Where to follow the issue
51:19 A second retail expert: Grant’s dad
53:24 Shrinkage from a store manager’s perspective
56:25 Why customer service prevents theft
57:23 The rise of undercover loss prevention
58:19 Managing stores in high-theft neighborhoods
01:02:40 Why stores actually close
01:04:14 When subsidizing problem stores stops making sense
01:06:18 Prosecuting every shoplifter
01:07:27 Advice for today’s retail managers
01:08:20 Family photos, old stores and disposable cameras

A Four Star Podcast is new every Tuesday morning at 6.

</p><p> </p><p>Learn more about your ad choices. Visit <a href="https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices">podcastchoices.com/adchoices</a></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <itunes:duration>4238</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <guid isPermaLink="false"><![CDATA[b7dcdb96-58b2-11f1-96cd-8716bcc00f0d]]></guid>
      <enclosure url="https://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/pdst.fm/e/traffic.megaphone.fm/FOXM3401311932.mp3" length="0" type="audio/mpeg"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Ultimate Backyard Secret for Stressed City Parents</title>
      <description>Why are American cities losing families at greater rates than any other demographic? According to Alicia Pederson, known online as the Courtyard Urbanist, the answer isn't a lack of desire for city living - it’s a catastrophic design failure.

In this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, we sit down with Pederson to dismantle the standard, developer-driven housing templates that dominate modern American cities. A "recovering academic" with a PhD in Renaissance Literature, Pederson bridges the gap between 16th-century Italian urban design and 21st-century Chicago zoning policy. 

She introduces us to the "Goldilocks" density of the European perimeter block: mid-rise, wall-to-wall housing structures built around a secured, shared interior green courtyard. 


It is an architectural strategy that effectively brings "the big house with a yard" right into the city center.  

We dive deep into the daily mechanics of urban parenting, exploring why massive apartment complexes with "double-loaded corridors" isolate families and cut children off from safe outdoor spaces. Pederson contrasts these "disgusting" designs with the "Point Access Block" or single-stair layout, which eliminates long dark hallways and guarantees dual-aspect apartments with windows on both sides—allowing parents to actually watch and hear their kids playing outside while making dinner.  

Finally, we look at the exact policy changes required to unlock this housing renaissance in Chicago. From the massive implications of single-stair reform in Governor Pritzker’s Build Act to the "boring" local zoning restrictions like front and side setback requirements that actively outlaw community-centric architecture, Alicia outlines a beautiful, high-density future for major redevelopments like Lincoln Yards and The 78.  

More from Alicia Pederson:

https://x.com/UrbanCourtyard
https://courtyardurbanist.com/

A Four Star Podcast is all-new Tuesday mornings at 6AM!

CHAPTERS

00:00 Cold Open: A European Inspiration for Family Density
00:31 Welcome Alicia Pederson, The Courtyard Urbanist
01:18 The Housing Crisis: Why Cities are Losing Families
02:41 Defining Courtyard Urbanism (It's Not a Courtyard Marriott)
05:04 The Flaw of the American "Double-Loaded Corridor"
08:38 Hidden Costs: Parking, Egress, and Over-Regulated Elevators
10:25 The Drowning Hazard: Why Building Pools Instead of Yards Fails Parents
11:36 The Mom’s Perspective: The Mental Health Burden of Arranging Playdates
15:43 The Isolation Paradox: Shared Spaces for Single Parents and Adults
17:05 From Renaissance Literature to Urban Advocacy: Alicia’s Journey
20:56 Dual-Aspect Living: Making Apartments That "Live Like a House"
22:15 Lessons from a 16th-Century Florentine Palazzo
26:07 The Build Act: Will Pritzker’s Legislation Legalize Better Buildings?
27:59 The Inglewood Proposal &amp; The Nightmare of Chicago Setback Laws
31:07 The "Greystone Legacy" and Boston’s North End Architecture
34:25 19th-Century Light Regulations: How Scandinavia Solved the Geometry
35:55 Scaling Up: Micro-Tear Downs vs. Mega Projects Like The 78 and Lincoln Yards
37:52 The Deep Floor Plate Problem: Converting Commercial Buildings to Homes
40:04 The Rise of the Live-Work Neighborhood &amp; The Death of the Office Tower
41:57 The Modern Dual-Income Household vs. The 1950s Suburban Commute
43:34 What is a "Texas Donut"? Disguising Car Dependency
46:37 Pastoral Friction: What 16th-Century Writers Can Teach 21st-Century Chicago
49:52 Millennial Revival: Catching Up to European Standards
52:45 The Magic Wand: Two Codes Alicia Would Wipe Out Tomorrow
55:30 Outro: Where to Find the Courtyard Urbanist Online


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 18:36:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Why are American cities losing families at greater rates than any other demographic? According to Alicia Pederson, known online as the Courtyard Urbanist, the answer isn't a lack of desire for city living - it’s a catastrophic design failure.

In this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, we sit down with Pederson to dismantle the standard, developer-driven housing templates that dominate modern American cities. A "recovering academic" with a PhD in Renaissance Literature, Pederson bridges the gap between 16th-century Italian urban design and 21st-century Chicago zoning policy. 

She introduces us to the "Goldilocks" density of the European perimeter block: mid-rise, wall-to-wall housing structures built around a secured, shared interior green courtyard. 


It is an architectural strategy that effectively brings "the big house with a yard" right into the city center.  

We dive deep into the daily mechanics of urban parenting, exploring why massive apartment complexes with "double-loaded corridors" isolate families and cut children off from safe outdoor spaces. Pederson contrasts these "disgusting" designs with the "Point Access Block" or single-stair layout, which eliminates long dark hallways and guarantees dual-aspect apartments with windows on both sides—allowing parents to actually watch and hear their kids playing outside while making dinner.  

Finally, we look at the exact policy changes required to unlock this housing renaissance in Chicago. From the massive implications of single-stair reform in Governor Pritzker’s Build Act to the "boring" local zoning restrictions like front and side setback requirements that actively outlaw community-centric architecture, Alicia outlines a beautiful, high-density future for major redevelopments like Lincoln Yards and The 78.  

More from Alicia Pederson:

https://x.com/UrbanCourtyard
https://courtyardurbanist.com/

A Four Star Podcast is all-new Tuesday mornings at 6AM!

CHAPTERS

00:00 Cold Open: A European Inspiration for Family Density
00:31 Welcome Alicia Pederson, The Courtyard Urbanist
01:18 The Housing Crisis: Why Cities are Losing Families
02:41 Defining Courtyard Urbanism (It's Not a Courtyard Marriott)
05:04 The Flaw of the American "Double-Loaded Corridor"
08:38 Hidden Costs: Parking, Egress, and Over-Regulated Elevators
10:25 The Drowning Hazard: Why Building Pools Instead of Yards Fails Parents
11:36 The Mom’s Perspective: The Mental Health Burden of Arranging Playdates
15:43 The Isolation Paradox: Shared Spaces for Single Parents and Adults
17:05 From Renaissance Literature to Urban Advocacy: Alicia’s Journey
20:56 Dual-Aspect Living: Making Apartments That "Live Like a House"
22:15 Lessons from a 16th-Century Florentine Palazzo
26:07 The Build Act: Will Pritzker’s Legislation Legalize Better Buildings?
27:59 The Inglewood Proposal &amp; The Nightmare of Chicago Setback Laws
31:07 The "Greystone Legacy" and Boston’s North End Architecture
34:25 19th-Century Light Regulations: How Scandinavia Solved the Geometry
35:55 Scaling Up: Micro-Tear Downs vs. Mega Projects Like The 78 and Lincoln Yards
37:52 The Deep Floor Plate Problem: Converting Commercial Buildings to Homes
40:04 The Rise of the Live-Work Neighborhood &amp; The Death of the Office Tower
41:57 The Modern Dual-Income Household vs. The 1950s Suburban Commute
43:34 What is a "Texas Donut"? Disguising Car Dependency
46:37 Pastoral Friction: What 16th-Century Writers Can Teach 21st-Century Chicago
49:52 Millennial Revival: Catching Up to European Standards
52:45 The Magic Wand: Two Codes Alicia Would Wipe Out Tomorrow
55:30 Outro: Where to Find the Courtyard Urbanist Online


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Why are American cities losing families at greater rates than any other demographic? According to Alicia Pederson, known online as the Courtyard Urbanist, the answer isn't a lack of desire for city living - it’s a catastrophic design failure.

In this episode of FOX Chicago's A Four Star Podcast, we sit down with Pederson to dismantle the standard, developer-driven housing templates that dominate modern American cities. A "recovering academic" with a PhD in Renaissance Literature, Pederson bridges the gap between 16th-century Italian urban design and 21st-century Chicago zoning policy. </p>
<p>She introduces us to the "Goldilocks" density of the European perimeter block: mid-rise, wall-to-wall housing structures built around a secured, shared interior green courtyard. </p>
<p>
It is an architectural strategy that effectively brings "the big house with a yard" right into the city center.  

We dive deep into the daily mechanics of urban parenting, exploring why massive apartment complexes with "double-loaded corridors" isolate families and cut children off from safe outdoor spaces. Pederson contrasts these "disgusting" designs with the "Point Access Block" or single-stair layout, which eliminates long dark hallways and guarantees dual-aspect apartments with windows on both sides—allowing parents to actually watch and hear their kids playing outside while making dinner.  

Finally, we look at the exact policy changes required to unlock this housing renaissance in Chicago. From the massive implications of single-stair reform in Governor Pritzker’s Build Act to the "boring" local zoning restrictions like front and side setback requirements that actively outlaw community-centric architecture, Alicia outlines a beautiful, high-density future for major redevelopments like Lincoln Yards and The 78.  

More from Alicia Pederson:

https://x.com/UrbanCourtyard
https://courtyardurbanist.com/

A Four Star Podcast is all-new Tuesday mornings at 6AM!

CHAPTERS

00:00 Cold Open: A European Inspiration for Family Density
00:31 Welcome Alicia Pederson, The Courtyard Urbanist
01:18 The Housing Crisis: Why Cities are Losing Families
02:41 Defining Courtyard Urbanism (It's Not a Courtyard Marriott)
05:04 The Flaw of the American "Double-Loaded Corridor"
08:38 Hidden Costs: Parking, Egress, and Over-Regulated Elevators
10:25 The Drowning Hazard: Why Building Pools Instead of Yards Fails Parents
11:36 The Mom’s Perspective: The Mental Health Burden of Arranging Playdates
15:43 The Isolation Paradox: Shared Spaces for Single Parents and Adults
17:05 From Renaissance Literature to Urban Advocacy: Alicia’s Journey
20:56 Dual-Aspect Living: Making Apartments That "Live Like a House"
22:15 Lessons from a 16th-Century Florentine Palazzo
26:07 The Build Act: Will Pritzker’s Legislation Legalize Better Buildings?
27:59 The Inglewood Proposal &amp; The Nightmare of Chicago Setback Laws
31:07 The "Greystone Legacy" and Boston’s North End Architecture
34:25 19th-Century Light Regulations: How Scandinavia Solved the Geometry
35:55 Scaling Up: Micro-Tear Downs vs. Mega Projects Like The 78 and Lincoln Yards
37:52 The Deep Floor Plate Problem: Converting Commercial Buildings to Homes
40:04 The Rise of the Live-Work Neighborhood &amp; The Death of the Office Tower
41:57 The Modern Dual-Income Household vs. The 1950s Suburban Commute
43:34 What is a "Texas Donut"? Disguising Car Dependency
46:37 Pastoral Friction: What 16th-Century Writers Can Teach 21st-Century Chicago
49:52 Millennial Revival: Catching Up to European Standards
52:45 The Magic Wand: Two Codes Alicia Would Wipe Out Tomorrow
55:30 Outro: Where to Find the Courtyard Urbanist Online

</p><p> </p><p>Learn more about your ad choices. Visit <a href="https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices">podcastchoices.com/adchoices</a></p>]]>
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      <itunes:duration>3439</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>How Democratic Socialists Captured City Hall</title>
      <description>When the Mayor of a major American city responds to the flight of its largest taxpayers with a laughing “Bye,” it isn’t just a viral clip. It’s a mission statement. For decades, blue city politics was defined by moderate Democrats and corporate compromise. But in 2026, the "machine" has been rebuilt.

In this episode, Grant is joined by Austin Berg, Executive Director of Chicago Policy for the Illinois Policy Institute, to look past the rhetoric and into the new mechanics of municipal power. They discuss the "dossier" of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) members who have moved from outside the gates to the levers of executive power. From the "tax the rich" performance of NYC’s Zohran Mamdani to the institutional capture of Chicago’s administrative agencies, they explore what happens when "the dog catches the car" and activists actually have to deliver results.

Connect with Austin Berg:

Substack: https://www.thelastward.org/
X: https://x.com/Austin__Berg
Writing &amp; Research: https://www.illinoispolicy.org/author/aberg/

00:00 Cold Open: The Dog Catches the Car
00:58 Introduction: Austin Berg and the DSA Influence
02:30 Video Analysis: Mamdani’s "Terror Tax" and Griffin’s Response
05:45 Results vs. Intentions: The Seattle Starbucks Boycott
09:45 The Wealth Tax Illusion: Why US Cities aren't European Democracies
11:40 The Resilience of New York vs. the Exit of Ken Griffin
14:40 Learning Hard Lessons: Lessons from the California Wealth Tax
15:50 Patient Zero: How Bernie Sanders 2016 Transformed the DSA
18:30 The Municipal Strategy: Why Local Elections are Easy to Sway
20:45 Tactics of the Vanguard: Obstruct, Appoint, and Primary
22:45 Follow the Money: The Role of Government Sector Unions
26:15 Chicago’s Squad: Performative Policy vs. Ward Service
29:40 The Public Safety Debate: ShotSpotter and Ideological Litmus Tests
32:50 Economic Stagnation: Head Taxes and Millionaire Surcharges
35:50 Personnel is Policy: The Infiltration of Appointed Leadership
40:45 Cops are Pigs: Activist Rhetoric vs. Professional Governance
44:30 Is the Vibe Shifting? Lessons from San Francisco’s Rebound
48:30 The Solution: Why Chicago Needs a City Charter
50:20 Being "Long" on Chicago: Man-made Problems and Man-made Solutions


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 18:11:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>When the Mayor of a major American city responds to the flight of its largest taxpayers with a laughing “Bye,” it isn’t just a viral clip. It’s a mission statement. For decades, blue city politics was defined by moderate Democrats and corporate compromise. But in 2026, the "machine" has been rebuilt.

In this episode, Grant is joined by Austin Berg, Executive Director of Chicago Policy for the Illinois Policy Institute, to look past the rhetoric and into the new mechanics of municipal power. They discuss the "dossier" of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) members who have moved from outside the gates to the levers of executive power. From the "tax the rich" performance of NYC’s Zohran Mamdani to the institutional capture of Chicago’s administrative agencies, they explore what happens when "the dog catches the car" and activists actually have to deliver results.

Connect with Austin Berg:

Substack: https://www.thelastward.org/
X: https://x.com/Austin__Berg
Writing &amp; Research: https://www.illinoispolicy.org/author/aberg/

00:00 Cold Open: The Dog Catches the Car
00:58 Introduction: Austin Berg and the DSA Influence
02:30 Video Analysis: Mamdani’s "Terror Tax" and Griffin’s Response
05:45 Results vs. Intentions: The Seattle Starbucks Boycott
09:45 The Wealth Tax Illusion: Why US Cities aren't European Democracies
11:40 The Resilience of New York vs. the Exit of Ken Griffin
14:40 Learning Hard Lessons: Lessons from the California Wealth Tax
15:50 Patient Zero: How Bernie Sanders 2016 Transformed the DSA
18:30 The Municipal Strategy: Why Local Elections are Easy to Sway
20:45 Tactics of the Vanguard: Obstruct, Appoint, and Primary
22:45 Follow the Money: The Role of Government Sector Unions
26:15 Chicago’s Squad: Performative Policy vs. Ward Service
29:40 The Public Safety Debate: ShotSpotter and Ideological Litmus Tests
32:50 Economic Stagnation: Head Taxes and Millionaire Surcharges
35:50 Personnel is Policy: The Infiltration of Appointed Leadership
40:45 Cops are Pigs: Activist Rhetoric vs. Professional Governance
44:30 Is the Vibe Shifting? Lessons from San Francisco’s Rebound
48:30 The Solution: Why Chicago Needs a City Charter
50:20 Being "Long" on Chicago: Man-made Problems and Man-made Solutions


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>When the Mayor of a major American city responds to the flight of its largest taxpayers with a laughing “Bye,” it isn’t just a viral clip. It’s a mission statement. For decades, blue city politics was defined by moderate Democrats and corporate compromise. But in 2026, the "machine" has been rebuilt.

In this episode, Grant is joined by Austin Berg, Executive Director of Chicago Policy for the Illinois Policy Institute, to look past the rhetoric and into the new mechanics of municipal power. They discuss the "dossier" of Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) members who have moved from outside the gates to the levers of executive power. From the "tax the rich" performance of NYC’s Zohran Mamdani to the institutional capture of Chicago’s administrative agencies, they explore what happens when "the dog catches the car" and activists actually have to deliver results.

Connect with Austin Berg:

Substack: https://www.thelastward.org/
X: https://x.com/Austin__Berg
Writing &amp; Research: https://www.illinoispolicy.org/author/aberg/

00:00 Cold Open: The Dog Catches the Car
00:58 Introduction: Austin Berg and the DSA Influence
02:30 Video Analysis: Mamdani’s "Terror Tax" and Griffin’s Response
05:45 Results vs. Intentions: The Seattle Starbucks Boycott
09:45 The Wealth Tax Illusion: Why US Cities aren't European Democracies
11:40 The Resilience of New York vs. the Exit of Ken Griffin
14:40 Learning Hard Lessons: Lessons from the California Wealth Tax
15:50 Patient Zero: How Bernie Sanders 2016 Transformed the DSA
18:30 The Municipal Strategy: Why Local Elections are Easy to Sway
20:45 Tactics of the Vanguard: Obstruct, Appoint, and Primary
22:45 Follow the Money: The Role of Government Sector Unions
26:15 Chicago’s Squad: Performative Policy vs. Ward Service
29:40 The Public Safety Debate: ShotSpotter and Ideological Litmus Tests
32:50 Economic Stagnation: Head Taxes and Millionaire Surcharges
35:50 Personnel is Policy: The Infiltration of Appointed Leadership
40:45 Cops are Pigs: Activist Rhetoric vs. Professional Governance
44:30 Is the Vibe Shifting? Lessons from San Francisco’s Rebound
48:30 The Solution: Why Chicago Needs a City Charter
50:20 Being "Long" on Chicago: Man-made Problems and Man-made Solutions

</p><p> </p><p>Learn more about your ad choices. Visit <a href="https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices">podcastchoices.com/adchoices</a></p>]]>
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      <itunes:duration>3211</itunes:duration>
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    <item>
      <title>A glow up for the Chicago Transit Authority</title>
      <description>Better transit. Safer streets. Smarter Chicago. This is A Four Star Podcast.

In the premiere edition of A Four Star Podcast, we dive into the nuts and bolts of urban survival in a city that often feels like it's working against its residents. Our thesis is simple: identifying the specific civic gears that are stuck and finding the practical, sometimes "guerrilla" solutions to grease them.

We start with John Greenfield (Streetsblog Chicago) to discuss the "El Hygiene" crisis. From the "Halloween Miracle" that saved transit funding to the tactical urbanism of using hot dog cartoons to stop smokers on the Blue Line, we explore how to restore the CTA to its status as a world-class utility.

Next, realtor Philip Schwartz pulls back the curtain on a bizarre spring real estate market that is punishing buyers. We analyze the BUILD Act and the legislative friction surrounding ADUs, alongside a warning for bungalow owners: your traditionally "dry" neighborhood is changing, and it might cost you $20,000 to stay above water.

Finally, former CPD Superintendent Garry McCarthy joins us for a heated look at Senate Bill 3564. As Springfield looks to restrict facial recognition technology, McCarthy argues that we are legislating away the very tools that solve modern murders, leading to a "hand-shy" police force and a decline in public safety.

Chapters

00:00 Cold Open
01:24 The CTA: The Quality of Life Value
05:28 Chicago Transit's Halloween Miracle
08:53 Be More Like Paris
10:38 Poodle Noodles &amp; Politics
15:28 El Hygiene 101
17:58 The D.C. Blueprint
24:03 Guerrilla Urbanism to Stop Train Smoking
34:33 Road Diets
40:13 The Waymo Pace Car
50:28 Digging into the BUILD Act
56:53 The One-Stairwell Debate
01:03:38 Big Prices: Resetting the Market
01:10:08 How Sellers Put Pressure on Buyers
01:18:23 The Wealth Gap
01:30:38 Chicago's Basement Flooding Realities
01:34:13 Why Cops Need Facial Recognition Tech
01:39:53 Legislators Getting in the Way of Safety
01:47:38 The Ferguson Effect in Chicago
01:54:33 Final Watch


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 14:32:00 -0000</pubDate>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:author>Fox 32 Chicago</itunes:author>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Better transit. Safer streets. Smarter Chicago. This is A Four Star Podcast.

In the premiere edition of A Four Star Podcast, we dive into the nuts and bolts of urban survival in a city that often feels like it's working against its residents. Our thesis is simple: identifying the specific civic gears that are stuck and finding the practical, sometimes "guerrilla" solutions to grease them.

We start with John Greenfield (Streetsblog Chicago) to discuss the "El Hygiene" crisis. From the "Halloween Miracle" that saved transit funding to the tactical urbanism of using hot dog cartoons to stop smokers on the Blue Line, we explore how to restore the CTA to its status as a world-class utility.

Next, realtor Philip Schwartz pulls back the curtain on a bizarre spring real estate market that is punishing buyers. We analyze the BUILD Act and the legislative friction surrounding ADUs, alongside a warning for bungalow owners: your traditionally "dry" neighborhood is changing, and it might cost you $20,000 to stay above water.

Finally, former CPD Superintendent Garry McCarthy joins us for a heated look at Senate Bill 3564. As Springfield looks to restrict facial recognition technology, McCarthy argues that we are legislating away the very tools that solve modern murders, leading to a "hand-shy" police force and a decline in public safety.

Chapters

00:00 Cold Open
01:24 The CTA: The Quality of Life Value
05:28 Chicago Transit's Halloween Miracle
08:53 Be More Like Paris
10:38 Poodle Noodles &amp; Politics
15:28 El Hygiene 101
17:58 The D.C. Blueprint
24:03 Guerrilla Urbanism to Stop Train Smoking
34:33 Road Diets
40:13 The Waymo Pace Car
50:28 Digging into the BUILD Act
56:53 The One-Stairwell Debate
01:03:38 Big Prices: Resetting the Market
01:10:08 How Sellers Put Pressure on Buyers
01:18:23 The Wealth Gap
01:30:38 Chicago's Basement Flooding Realities
01:34:13 Why Cops Need Facial Recognition Tech
01:39:53 Legislators Getting in the Way of Safety
01:47:38 The Ferguson Effect in Chicago
01:54:33 Final Watch


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices</itunes:summary>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>
Better transit. Safer streets. Smarter Chicago. This is A Four Star Podcast.

In the premiere edition of A Four Star Podcast, we dive into the nuts and bolts of urban survival in a city that often feels like it's working against its residents. Our thesis is simple: identifying the specific civic gears that are stuck and finding the practical, sometimes "guerrilla" solutions to grease them.

We start with John Greenfield (Streetsblog Chicago) to discuss the "El Hygiene" crisis. From the "Halloween Miracle" that saved transit funding to the tactical urbanism of using hot dog cartoons to stop smokers on the Blue Line, we explore how to restore the CTA to its status as a world-class utility.

Next, realtor Philip Schwartz pulls back the curtain on a bizarre spring real estate market that is punishing buyers. We analyze the BUILD Act and the legislative friction surrounding ADUs, alongside a warning for bungalow owners: your traditionally "dry" neighborhood is changing, and it might cost you $20,000 to stay above water.

Finally, former CPD Superintendent Garry McCarthy joins us for a heated look at Senate Bill 3564. As Springfield looks to restrict facial recognition technology, McCarthy argues that we are legislating away the very tools that solve modern murders, leading to a "hand-shy" police force and a decline in public safety.

Chapters

00:00 Cold Open
01:24 The CTA: The Quality of Life Value
05:28 Chicago Transit's Halloween Miracle
08:53 Be More Like Paris
10:38 Poodle Noodles &amp; Politics
15:28 El Hygiene 101
17:58 The D.C. Blueprint
24:03 Guerrilla Urbanism to Stop Train Smoking
34:33 Road Diets
40:13 The Waymo Pace Car
50:28 Digging into the BUILD Act
56:53 The One-Stairwell Debate
01:03:38 Big Prices: Resetting the Market
01:10:08 How Sellers Put Pressure on Buyers
01:18:23 The Wealth Gap
01:30:38 Chicago's Basement Flooding Realities
01:34:13 Why Cops Need Facial Recognition Tech
01:39:53 Legislators Getting in the Way of Safety
01:47:38 The Ferguson Effect in Chicago
01:54:33 Final Watch

</p><p> </p><p>Learn more about your ad choices. Visit <a href="https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices">podcastchoices.com/adchoices</a></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
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