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Tag: Winners

  • Charlotte marathon: Record turnout, runners from 19 countries, all 50 states

    Participants celebrate after competing in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C.

    Participants celebrate after competing in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C.

    For the Observer

    A record 11,500 runners took to the streets of Charlotte on Saturday for the 21st annual Novant Health Charlotte Marathon.

    All the events reached capacity for the second straight year, with the 26.2-mile marathon, half-marathon and 5K drawing runners from 19 countries and all 50 states, organizers said.

    “This event has turned into a big deal,” Tim Rhodes, marathon managing partner and race director, said Saturday night. “This is a celebration of everything these runners have worked for. Whether they’re setting a [personal record], qualifying for Boston or finishing for the very first time, they’re choosing to do it in Charlotte.”

    A participant poses for a photo after competing in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C.
    A participant poses for a photo after competing in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer

    The temperature was a frigid 45 degrees when the event started around 7 a.m. on South Tryon Street, between Levine Avenue of the Arts and Brooklyn Village Avenue.

    Participants embrace after competing in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C.
    Participants embrace after competing in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Matt Kelley For the Observer

    Carter Coughlin of Knoxville, Tennessee, was the overall winner, and Jessica Sarnicola of Matthews won the women’s title.

    In another first, Elisabeth Laseter of Charlotte defended her title in the Chick-fil-A 5k event, besting her 2024 finish time by nearly 18 seconds, according to results released Saturday night.

    And Nathaneal Williams of Lancaster, South Carolina, may have set a new world record for fastest half marathon pushing a double stroller.

    Participants compete in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, North Carolina.
    Participants compete in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, North Carolina. Matt Kelley For the Observer

    According to the Guinness World Records site, the fastest men’s time stands at 1:14:20. Williams clocked a 1:12:57 on the Charlotte half marathon course, results show.

    “The last few miles, I was hurting pretty good,” Williams said in a marathon news release. “The next steps are to send the results to Guinness to confirm that as the new record.”

    Coughlin won the marathon in 2 hours, 31 minutes and 44 seconds.

    Sarnicola topped all women with a time of 3 hours, 1 minute and 48 seconds.

    In the half marathon, Alexis Collumb of Yvrech, France, won the men’s field in 1 hour, 4 minutes and 31 seconds.

    Abigail Herring of Parkersburg, West Virginia, was the top women’s finisher in 1 hour, 16 minutes and 21 seconds.

    Supporters cheer on participants in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, North Carolina.
    Supporters cheer on participants in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, North Carolina. Matt Kelley For the Observer

    Silas Floyd Fair of Charlotte won the men’s 5K with a time of 15 minutes and 50 seconds.

    Elizabeth Laseter of Charlotte was the top women’s finisher at 16 minutes and 38 seconds.

    Complete results are available on RaceRoster.com.

    The event and its participants have contributed more than $600,000 to support programs at Novant Health’s Hemby Children’s Hospital, organizers said.

    Participants compete in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, North Carolina.
    Participants compete in the Novant Health Charlotte Marathon on Saturday, Nov. 15, 2025, in Charlotte, North Carolina. Matt Kelley For the Observer

    Joe Marusak

    The Charlotte Observer

    Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

    Joe Marusak

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  • ‘I had goosebumps’: Ohio couple wins $100,000 Keno prize while on vacation

    ‘I had goosebumps’: Ohio couple wins $100,000 Keno prize while on vacation

    IT WAS A BITTERSWEET WIN FOR KAREN KAUFMAN, AS SHE WON BIG ON A $1 MILLION SCRATCH OFF JUST AS HER HUSBAND OF NEARLY 31 YEARS WAS LOSING HIS BATTLE WITH THE BRAIN TUMOR, HE COULDN’T DO ANYTHING ANYMORE, AND MY DAUGHTER MOVED BACK HOME TO HELP ME TAKE CARE OF HIM, AND I WORKED EVERY DAY AND SHE WOULD WATCH HIM WHILE I WAS AT WORK, AND I’D COME HOME AND BUT AND THAT WAS JUST ONE OF THE DAYS THAT I STOPPED AFTER WORK AND STOPPED HERE. AND GRABBED THE TICKET AND I SCRATCHED IT AND WON A MILLION DOLLARS. JUST TWO WEEKS AFTER WINNING THAT LIFE CHANGING SCRATCH OFF, HER HUSBAND PASSED AWAY. AND WHILE SHE SAYS HER FRIENDS AND FAMILY WERE SHOCKED BY THE WIN, SHE HAD BEEN TELLING HER HUSBAND FOR YEARS SHE WAS GOING TO WIN BIG. KAUFMAN ALREADY HAS SEVERAL PLANS FOR HOW SHE’LL SPEND THE MONEY. WE’RE GOING TO DISNEY. ANYTHING ELSE? UH, I’M PROBABLY MOVING SOUTH. YEAH. I DON’T WANT WINTER ANYMORE. SO THAT’S THE PLAN. AND GO DEEP SEA FISHING. KNOCK THAT OFF THE BUCKET LIST. TAKING THE GRANDSONS WITH ME. AND WHILE THIS IS KOFMAN’S BIGGEST LOTTERY WIN, IT IS NOT THE ONLY TIME SHE’S HAD LUCK HERE. SHE SAID SEVERAL YEARS AGO, SHE WON A FEW PRIZES AS A NICE TRIP AND EVEN A $65,000 SCRATCH OFF TICKET I

    ‘I had goosebumps’: Ohio couple wins $100,000 Keno prize while on vacation in Kentucky

    An Ohio couple made a big splash during a recent vacation, returning home with an extra $100,000 on a winning Keno ticket with the Kentucky Lottery.Related video above: ‘Bittersweet’: Pennsylvania woman wins $1 million in lottery 2 weeks before husband’s deathThe lottery says Steven and Wendy Green of Alexandria, Ohio, were at their Lake Cumberland houseboat when they went to their favorite restaurant, Wings and Rings in Somerset, and played Keno while dining.Lottery officials say Steven Green told them he had played with the same 10 numbers for a while, using significant birthdays and ages of his wife and kids. But, this time, he changed up a couple of numbers and purchased a $5 ticket instead of a $10 one.“Oh my God, we hit a lot of numbers on this one,” Wendy Green told the lottery. Once the drawing was complete, they handed the ticket to the bartender to check. “She scanned it, but it gave them the message, ‘See KLC Corp, prize exceeds cashing limit,’” Steven Green said.The ticket matched 10 of 20 numbers on a Sept. 12 Keno drawing, earning them the game’s $100,000 top prize.”I had goosebumps,” Steven Green said, describing how he felt seeing the number pop up on the screen after he scanned his ticket. “It took about 10-15 minutes for it to sink in.””She started crying, I started crying. Then there was hugging,” he added.After taxes, the couple took home a check for $72,000. The couple told lottery officials they are looking to retire in a couple of years, so the winnings will help them prepare.For selling a winning ticket, Wings and Rings will receive $1,000.

    An Ohio couple made a big splash during a recent vacation, returning home with an extra $100,000 on a winning Keno ticket with the Kentucky Lottery.

    Related video above: ‘Bittersweet’: Pennsylvania woman wins $1 million in lottery 2 weeks before husband’s death

    The lottery says Steven and Wendy Green of Alexandria, Ohio, were at their Lake Cumberland houseboat when they went to their favorite restaurant, Wings and Rings in Somerset, and played Keno while dining.

    Lottery officials say Steven Green told them he had played with the same 10 numbers for a while, using significant birthdays and ages of his wife and kids. But, this time, he changed up a couple of numbers and purchased a $5 ticket instead of a $10 one.

    “Oh my God, we hit a lot of numbers on this one,” Wendy Green told the lottery.

    Once the drawing was complete, they handed the ticket to the bartender to check.

    “She scanned it, but it gave them the message, ‘See KLC Corp, prize exceeds cashing limit,’” Steven Green said.

    The ticket matched 10 of 20 numbers on a Sept. 12 Keno drawing, earning them the game’s $100,000 top prize.

    “I had goosebumps,” Steven Green said, describing how he felt seeing the number pop up on the screen after he scanned his ticket. “It took about 10-15 minutes for it to sink in.”

    “She started crying, I started crying. Then there was hugging,” he added.

    After taxes, the couple took home a check for $72,000. The couple told lottery officials they are looking to retire in a couple of years, so the winnings will help them prepare.

    For selling a winning ticket, Wings and Rings will receive $1,000.

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  • Avondale and Irving Park Restaurants Win Titles for Chicago’s Best Burgers

    Avondale and Irving Park Restaurants Win Titles for Chicago’s Best Burgers

    Eden, the farm-to-table restaurant off the Chicago River in Avondale, and Irving Park’s JT’s Genuine Sandwich Shop were the big winners over the weekend at Chicago Gourmet’s Hamburger Hop, the annual competition that crowns the best burgers in the city.

    Eden chef Devon Quinn took home the competition’s Judges Award, given out by an eight-member panel including former Tribune critic Phil Vettel, Chicago dining editor Amy Cavanaugh, and Mott St chef Edward Kim.

    JT’s Genuine Sandwich Shop earned the People’s Choice Award, determined by votes from the event’s sold-out crowd. Fourteen chefs competed in the event on Friday, September 27, part of Chicago Gourmet, the food festival created by the Illinois Restaurant Association.

    The competitors were bound by ingredients from sponsors, like beef from Sysco and cheese from Kerrygold. But that didn’t mean they couldn’t get adventurous with add-ons.

    Quinn and Eden chef de cuisine Brian Shim blended two cheeses — Dubliner and Reserve cheddar; and MontAmore, a Parmesan-inspired cheese from Wisconsin — into an American cheese. They also topped their burger with dill pickle-corn slaw (Quinn’s favorite pickle Claussen with grilled corn and onions bound together with black garlic aioli), flatwater arugula, and roasted tomatoes. It was served on a potato bun from sponsor Turano Baking.

    “There are lots of flavors, but each one comes through really clearly in the burger,” says Quinn.

    The People’s Choice winner from JT’s used Kerrygold aged cheddar, Dijonnaise, pickled Granny Smith apples, and hickory-smoked bacon. It was served on a Turano French brioche bun. Before his win, Chris Cunningham, a first-time competitor at Hamburger Hop, was just happy to be invited: “It’s a competition, but we’ve already won meeting all these wonderful new faces. We’re having an absolute blast today.”

    Post-award, Cunningham was planning to take his team out to dinner. “They did an awesome job dealing with the wind and everything back there on the grill, so I can’t wait to celebrate and share this with them.”

    High winds were a problem Friday night, with the National Weather Service warning Chicagoans to be ready for winds between 30 to 35 mph as a result of the remnants of Hurricane Helene.

    Creativity is a word that could also describe what some of this year’s judges, a mix of food media folks, hospitality purveyors, chefs, and restaurant owners, were looking for in a winning burger. Last year, a Seattle chef swept both awards. This year’s event featured one out-of-towner, but a repeat of 2023 didn’t occur. The 14 participants even included a vegan restaurant, Soul Veg City.

    “I look for burgers that there’s something special about them,” says Chicago’s Cavanaugh. “They have something unique, but they don’t stray too far afield from what a burger is supposed to be.”

    There were 14 competitors in the 2024 Hamburger Hop.
    Chicago Gourmet/Garrett Baumer

    Cavanaugh’s technique for judging 14 burgers? “I usually take two bites. I feel like you need a second bite to confirm.” To prepare for the meaty onslaught, she ate a big breakfast and four crackers for lunch. She had some thoughts about her eating habits post-judging too: “I might turn my back on cows entirely for the next few weeks.”

    Former Tribune critic Vettel has judged four Hamburger Hops, but he previously covered all the Chicago Gourmets while at the newspaper. “There’s an urban legend going around that I’ve correctly predicted the winner every single year,” he says. “It’s not actually true, but I go with it.”

    While more of a friendly competition than, say, Top Chef, winning Hamburger Hop does come with benefits beyond bragging rights. “I’ve seen some restaurants that have won either the People’s Choice or the Judge’s Choice burger in the past, and they still have those burgers on their menus,” says Vettel.

    Mott St’s Kim planned on keeping an open mind when it came to judging: “I’m trying not to have any preconceived notions.” He prepared by not eating too much the days prior to the event. “I’ve come in with a hungry appetite and whichever burger tastes best is going to win for me.”

    For her Seoul burger, chef Kaleena Bliss of Chicago Athletic Association Hotel and Cindy’s leaned into Korean flavors. Housemade ssamjang and a white kimchi aioli added some heat, while cucumber, cilantro, shredded carrot, and calamansi juice brought freshness and acidity to the hefty burger.

    “Who doesn’t want to be part of Chicago Gourmet?” says Bliss, who moved to Chicago last year and competed on Top Chef: Wisconsin. “Everyone cool is doing it.”

    Another first-timer was chef Jim Torres, who along with co-chef Kyle Schrage is behind Edgewater’s Beard & Belly. For their Hamburger Hop burger, they did a version of one they have at their gastropub that includes onion jam, roasted serrano, housemade awesome sauce, and cheddar cheese. “It’s a real big one just like me,” says Torres.

    For her first-time entry, chef Tigist Reda delved into the spices and flavors she often uses at Demera Ethiopian Restaurant but ones that are rarely found in a burger. That included berbere-seasoned onion jam, cardamom, and mitmita (a heat-forward Ethiopian spice blend) along with Angus beef steakburger, Kerrygold Dubliner, and a Turano French brioche bun.

    While Reda didn’t receive an award at Hamburger Hop, her burger was already a big winner. “My son was the first judge at home, and he gave it a thumbs up,” she says. “He’s a very tough critic.”

    Lisa Shames

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  • The Big Winners and Losers of the 2024 Emmys. Plus, ‘Industry’ S3E6.

    The Big Winners and Losers of the 2024 Emmys. Plus, ‘Industry’ S3E6.

    Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Chris and Ryan also dive into the debate on categories at the Emmys

    Chris and Andy recap last night’s Emmys ceremony, discussing how they felt about the overall broadcast itself (1:00) and whether or not it really matters whether The Bear runs in the comedy category (16:28). Then they break down the latest episode of Industry, talking about Harper and Yasmin’s face-off and Eric’s continued downward spiral (40:18).

    Hosts: Chris Ryan and Andy Greenwald
    Producer: Kaya McMullen

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts

    Chris Ryan

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  • The Winners and Losers of the 2024 Oscars

    The Winners and Losers of the 2024 Oscars

    The 2024 Academy Awards are in the books, which means we’ve finally reached the end of awards season. (That sound you hear is countless pop culture bloggers breathing a collective sigh of relief.) While there weren’t too many surprises during the show, the Oscars did what it does best: celebrate some of the best movies of the year, while giving a generational filmmaker his worthy coronation on Hollywood’s biggest night. Below, we break down the biggest winners and losers from Sunday’s festivities.

    Winner: The Oscars

    The Academy may not want to consider itself to be in crisis mode, but the Oscars haven’t been in the best place lately: the ratings continue to be in a freefall, and the most memorable moments of the past decade happen to involve an infamous Best Picture envelope mishap and Will Smith slapping Chris Rock in the face. But even though most of the awards on Sunday night had predictable outcomes, the Oscars managed to be something the ceremony has sorely lacked: fun.

    Ryan Gosling blew the roof off the Dolby Theatre with his lively rendition of “I’m Just Ken”; a naked John Cena realized we can see him (more on that shortly); the acting categories tried something different by having former Oscar winners give stirring tributes to each nominee. These moments and more contributed to the Oscars accomplishing what it should strive to do each year: celebrating the power of cinema with humor and heart.

    Winner: The Christopher Nolan Victory Lap

    Sometimes, the Oscars take a while to anoint an artist with a long-overdue statuette. After delivering masterpieces like Raging Bull and Goodfellas, it took until The Departed for Martin Scorsese to finally win an Oscar; Leonardo DiCaprio, meanwhile, had to eat raw bison liver in The Revenant to receive the Oscar he had long been craving. In that spirit, the 2024 Academy Awards will forever be known as the Christopher Nolan Oscars, with Oppenheimer taking home seven awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. But what’s so thrilling about Nolan’s coronation on the Oscars stage is that it’s a result of what may be the best film of the director’s distinguished career: a three-hour biopic that captivated moviegoers around the world and made nearly a billion dollars in the process.

    Also exciting: Nolan is 53, which in filmmaking terms—health permitting—means he’s got decades ahead of him to outdo what he achieved in Oppenheimer. Perhaps this won’t be the last time we see Nolan going on stage to accept an Oscar or two; we live in a twilight world, after all.

    Loser: Barbie

    For anyone who felt like Barbie was already dismissed by the Academy, which failed to nominate Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie for Best Director and Best Actress, respectively, the Oscars did little to dispel that notion. Despite being up for eight awards, Barbie only managed a single win, for Best Original Song, courtesy of Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell’s “What Was I Made For?” (One bit of good news: by winning, the 22-year-old Eilish and 26-year-old O’Connell became the youngest people in history to win two Oscars.)

    While Barbie was an outsider for Best Picture, it stood a much better chance of making some headway for Best Costume Design and Best Production Design. In both of these categories, though, Barbie lost out to Poor Things, which, as many people have noted, feels like a bizarro version of Barbie itself by way of Frankenstein’s Monster. It was a night to forget for Barbie, but that should be of little consequence. After all, Barbie was the highest-grossing movie of 2023: to paraphrase its Oscar-winning song, that’s what it was made for.

    Loser, Somehow: Killers of the Flower Moon

    Martin Scorsese has a long and storied history at the Oscars, and unfortunately, he’s often been on the losing end of things: both Gangs of New York and The Irishman had the honor of being nominated for 10 Oscars—and the ignominy of winning zero of them. Now, sadly, we can add Killers of the Flower Moon to that list, and like Scorsese’s previous epics, it deserved much better.

    There are two categories, in particular, where Killers of the Flower Moon should feel hard done by. For one, there was a time when Lily Gladstone seemed like a lock to win Best Actress: not only was her portrayal of Mollie Burkhart the soul of the film, but she would’ve become the first Native American to win an acting Oscar. Alas, the award went to Poor Things star Emma Stone, who looks like she’s living out the second season of The Curse in real time. And while Ludwig Goransson was widely tapped to win Best Original Score for his work in Oppenheimer, spare a thought for the late Robbie Robertson, whose music made a memorable imprint on Killers of the Flower Moon. All told, Scorsese’s latest masterpiece deserved better from the Academy; here’s hoping he has more luck with his adaptation of The Wager.

    Winner: Cord Jefferson

    In the past five years alone, American Fiction writer-director Cord Jefferson has put together an impressive body of work, writing episodes of The Good Place, Station Eleven, and HBO’s Watchmen miniseries, the latter of which won him an Emmy. (He was also a consultant on Succession, which just so happens to be one of the best shows of its era.) Now, Jefferson can add a Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar to his resume—in his directorial debut, no less—punctuated by a charming acceptance speech imploring Hollywood to make more $20 million movies instead of placing all their bets on one $200 million blockbuster.

    Also, I’m gonna go out on a limb and say Jefferson became the first person to win an Oscar who used to be an editor at Gawker (RIP). It’s been a brutal few months in digital media; Cord’s Oscar win is a win for journos everywhere.

    Winner: John Cena’s … Bits

    To commemorate (?) the 50th anniversary of the time a streaker ran across the stage during the 46th Academy Awards, John Cena briefly appeared naked on stage to present Best Costume Design. Poor Things ended up winning the Oscar, but that’s not what viewers are going to remember. Yes, that was an (absolutely shredded) WWE star actually waltzing on stage with just an envelope covering his crotch. There’s a universe in which this bit about Cena’s, ahem, bits, failed spectacularly, but if Dave Bautista is the WWE-turned-actor GOAT, Cena is far and away the funniest performer who started out in professional wrestling. The fact that this moment didn’t fall flat is a testament to Cena’s gifts for physical comedy. (Also, shout-out to that quick wardrobe change.) Hollywood, keep putting John Cena in comedies—just make them better than Ricky Stanicky.

    Impossible to Categorize: Al Pacino Announcing Best Picture

    The Academy brought out some legends of cinema throughout the evening—none other than Steven Spielberg handed Nolan his Best Director Oscar—but the ceremony saved the best for last. Al Pacino was on hand to present Best Picture, and he was rightly given a standing ovation by the attendees when he came on stage. Even among A-listers, the living legend who starred in the Godfather trilogy, Serpico, Heat, Dog Day Afternoon, Scent of a Woman, and so many more classics is in a league of his own.

    But as has been proved throughout his iconic career, Pacino also marches to the beat of his own drum: You never know what he’s going to do, or how he’s going to enunciate a line of dialogue. (“She’s got a GREAT ASS” lives in my head rent-free.) And after all the anticipation for the final award of the night, Best Picture, my guy anticlimactically opened the envelope, looked inside, and said, “My eyes see Oppenheimer?”

    Yes, Al Pacino turned his Best Picture announcement into a question with all the energy of someone who was brought on stage without any advance warning. Give him an Oscar for this performance, and let him announce every category next year.

    Loser: Messi’s Haters

    For anyone who watched Anatomy of a Fall, the true star of the film is Messi, the family dog who was integral to the plot—all the way down to the final verdict in the courtroom. Messi genuinely delivered what might be the best performance a dog has ever given on-screen, and he was given the A-list treatment throughout awards season, giving “interviews” on red carpets and appearing at official Oscars functions. Incredibly, some awards strategists were pissed about Messi stealing the limelight in the lead-up to the Oscars, fearing that this good boy would sway Academy members to give their vote to Anatomy of a Fall, and there were even reports that he wouldn’t attend the ceremony. Well, suck it, haters: not only was Messi in attendance, he was applauding during the show and peed on Matt Damon’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

    Is Messi the reason that Anatomy of a Fall ended up winning Best Original Screenplay? Who’s to say, but between the dog and the soccer player he’s named after, it’s safe to say that America has Messi Fever.

    Miles Surrey

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  • Galit and Chef Paul Virant Earn Local Banchet Honors

    Galit and Chef Paul Virant Earn Local Banchet Honors


    Sunday night marked a new beginning for the Jean Banchet Awards, the local honors that recognize Chicago restaurants and chefs (it’s also named for the esteemed French chef). The Banchets skipped 2023 as the committee of local chefs and tastemakers who vote on the awards reassembled itself with a new charitable beneficiary. Those efforts produced a brisk two-hour ceremony at Venue SIX10 where Galit, the upscale contemporary Middle Eastern eatery, won Restaurant of the Year.

    “I want to thank this lovely chef and bald gentleman, Zach [Engel], for giving me a call several years ago,” Galit co-owner Andres Clavero said Sunday night while onstage. “The stories of food have been so emotionally important and personal to the two of us. In a year where everyone was asked to do what’s changing what is different and nothing has changed — we will continue to share stories of those that are unheard and food that is meaningful and showcase people who don’t necessarily have a voice.”

    Clavero and chef Engel keep adding to their trophy case. The Lincoln Park restaurant has already achieved a Michelin star status for the last three years. Engel is a James Beard Award winner for 2017’s Rising Chef of the Year while he worked at Shaya in New Orleans. Later this year, the duo plans to open a second restaurant, a few doors away from Galit on Lincoln Avenue.

    Meanwhile, Paul Virant, a venerable chef behind hits like Gaijin in Fulton Market and Vistro Prime in suburban Hinsdale, won Chef of the Year. Virant’s influence, through cookbooks and as a role model to many chefs who attended the ceremony, is also evident at two of his shuttered restaurants, Perrenial Virant in Old Town, and Vie in suburban Western Springs.

    Awards host Michael Muser, the master sommelier and co-owner at Ever, kept the event running smoothly. While he peppered the show with jokes, he had only one meaty comedic bit which came in the opening monologue, a David Letterman-style Top 10 list, “Top 10 Ways to Tell if Your Restaurant Employee is High on the Job.”

    “No. 5: You serve a consummé that tasted like bong water because it actually is bong water,” Muser said.

    Muser dedicated that line to retired Chicago Tribune dining critic Phil Vettel, the recipient of the night’s Culinary Excellence of the Year Award. Breakfast Queen Ina Pinkney, looking spry before her 81st birthday on Valentine’s Day, presented the awarded Vettel with a charming story about when Vettel, then an anonymous critic, revealed his identity to her while interviewing her before her 2013 retirement. Vettel would retire in 2021 after 31 years at the Trib.

    “Do you know what a forager bee does?” Vettel told the audience. “The forager bee looks for flowers, looks for nectar — finds areas with really good quality nectar and then it goes back to the hive and does this little nectar dance which tells all the other bees ‘follow me I know where the good shit is.’”

    “And that’s my career.”

    For 2024, the Banchets partnered with Chicago Chefs Cook, a nonprofit that formed in 2020 and has raised more than $1 million for numerous charitable causes both internationally and locally. For the previous 20 years, the awards were associated with the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, but after the 2022 show, the sides separated.

    For Sunday’s event, Chicago Chefs Cook picked James Beard and Jean Banchet award winner Erick Williams’ group, the Virtue Leadership Development Program, as the beneficiary. Williams has stressed the importance of mentors — one example is Damarr Brown his chef de cuisine at Virtue and the 2023 Emerging Chef of the Year by the Beard Foundation. Williams spoke about the need to invest in underserved communities, and how those resources impact growth. Equity (versus equality) is about more than just what spaces look like in terms of representation.

    “By having the opportunities — or tools, equipment, the books, the support, the mentorship, and the development — I have the grand opportunity to speak with heads of states, heads of cities, and everyone down to someone’s 90-year-old grandmother who wanted to just celebrate being 90 years old,” Williams said.

    Another highlight from Sunday came after Rubi’s on 18th, the winner of Heritage Restaurant of the Year. Members of the family who owns Pilsen taqueria — once a staple at the Maxwell Street Market — took the stage. Owner Gilberto Ramirez hid tears behind a white cowboy hat he used to cover his face. After his family gave their remarks, he took the podium and simply yelled “I love Chicago!” That earned the loudest applause of the night.

    1462 E. 53rd Street, Chicago, IL



    Ashok Selvam

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  • Someone In California Just Won the $1.73 Billion Powerball Jackpot | Entrepreneur

    Someone In California Just Won the $1.73 Billion Powerball Jackpot | Entrepreneur

    If you happen to be walking around with a Powerball ticket that reads:

    22, 24, 40, 52, 64 and the Powerball 10

    You are on your way to becoming a very, very rich person.

    According to Powerball, a single lottery ticket sold somewhere in California matched all six numbers drawn Wednesday night to win a jackpot worth $1.765 billion, or a lump sum of $756.6 million before taxes.

    “Congratulations to the newest Powerball billionaire and the millions of Powerball players who won other cash prizes in last night’s drawing,” said Drew Svitko, Powerball Product Group Chair and Pennsylvania Lottery Executive Director.

    Historic prize

    The prize is the second-largest Powerball jackpot and U.S. lottery jackpot ever. The world record lottery jackpot was won by Edwin Castro on Nov. 7, 2022, also in California. Castro, who raked in a cool $2 billion, has gone on to buy numerous fancy homes across Los Angeles.

    Before Wednesday’s drawing, there were 35 consecutive draws without someone claiming a major prize, a streak that started on July 19 when a player in California won $1.08 billion.

    What is it about California and jackpots?

    The lucky ticket holder of the current prize certainly defied the odds, which Powerball says is 1 in 292.2 million.

    About Powerball

    Powerball tickets are $2 per play. Tickets are sold in 45 states, DC, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. According to Powerball, more than half of all proceeds from the sale of a Powerball ticket remain in the jurisdiction where the ticket was sold.

    Tonight’s winner isn’t the only one celebrating. As part of California Powerball rules, the retailer who sells the winning ticket receives O.5% of the jackpot.

    Related: Gas Station Owner Gets $1 Million For Selling the Winning Powerball Ticket. ‘No One Deserves It As Much As He Does.’

    Jonathan Small

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  • Mega Millions Jackpot Hits $1.58B After No Lottery Winner | Entrepreneur

    Mega Millions Jackpot Hits $1.58B After No Lottery Winner | Entrepreneur

    The Mega Millions Jackpot just upped the ante after there was no grand prize winner for Friday night’s billion-dollar drawing.

    The jackpot is now $1.58 billion after no one pulled Friday’s winning numbers — 11, 30, 45, 52 and 56, plus the gold Mega Ball 20.

    If someone claims the new prize, it would be a new Mega Millions record. The largest jackpot to date was $1.537 billion won in South Carolina in 2018.

    It’s been 31 drawings since the last winner, Johnnie Taylor, 71, won $476 million in April, a New York state record, per New York Lottery. Without a winner, the lottery has continued to grow.

    When is the next Mega Millions drawing?

    The $1.58 billion jackpot drawing is Tuesday at 11 p.m. The winner could take home a lump sum of $757.2 million cash or they can collect an annuity over 29 years according to a Mega Millions press release.

    Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images | Lottery tickets are seen at a store as Mega Millions jackpots grows $1 billion, in San Mateo, California, United States on July 31, 2023.

    RELATED: Man Wins Mega Millions After Cashier Makes Mistake on Lottery Ticket

    “There’s always an air of excitement around the country when Mega Millions jackpots soar,” said Georgia Lottery President and CEO Gretchen Corbin said, in another release ahead of the Friday dawing. “The growing jackpot is a source of entertainment and winnings for players while generating important dollars for the good causes supported by each lottery.”

    Although no one has won the biggest prize, there were a total of 4,904,910 winning tickets across all prize tiers from the August 1 drawing.

    The state of Texas had one $4 million winner. Additionally, two people won $1 million in California. Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, and Wisconsin each had a $1 million winner.

    RELATED: ‘Hard to Believe’: Mother and Son Both Win the Lottery Within Weeks of Each Other

    Since April, there have been 36 million winners across all prize levels ranging from a couple of dollars to $5 million.

    Sam Silverman

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  • RRR song Naatu Naatu lyricist Chandrabose expresses joy on winning BL Awards 2023

    RRR song Naatu Naatu lyricist Chandrabose expresses joy on winning BL Awards 2023

    The world has been grooving to the RRR song Naatu Naatu. The song made India proud by winning at Oscars 2023. It won the Best Original Song at the Academy Awards and also at the Golden Globe Awards. And that is not all, back home, the song won the BollywoodLife.com Awards 2023. Nominated in the Best Song – South category, the song was a clear winner with the maximum votes from fans and the celeb jury. The song is composed by M. M. Keeravani, penned by Chandrabose and rendered by Rahul Sipligunj and Kaala Bhairava. Picturised on two of the biggest Telugu stars, Jr NTR and Ram Charan, song has been a rage ever since the teasers went out even before RRR release. Expressing joy over the latest win, lyricist Chandrabose expressed, “BollywoodLife.com has awarded the best song Award to Naatu Naatu. I am very excited and happy. Winning BollywoodLife.com Award right after the Oscars is special. I would like to thank BollywoodLife.com, jury and fans.”

    The celebrated lyricist was still in the US when he heard the news of the big win at BL Awards 2023 and he sent us a heartfelt voice note expressing joy and gratitude. The other songs that were nominated in the Best Song categories along with Naatu Naatu are Megham Karukatha from Thiruchitrambalam, Naatu Naatu from RRR, O Sita from Sita Ramam. The other winners in the South Cinema categories are Best Actor: Rishab Shetty for Kantara, Best Actress: Mrunal Thakur for Sita Ramam, Best Director: Vipin Das for Jaya Jaya Jaya Jaya Hey, Best Supporting Role: Murali Sharma for Godfather, Best Film: Kantara and Best Song: Naatu Naatu from RRR.

    Watch the BollywoodLife.com Awards 2023 ceremony here:

    About BollywoodLife.com Awards

    In its 4th edition this year, BollywoodLife.com Awards 2023 is a celebration of talent across various genres of Entertainment. Fans nominate their chosen ones in various categories like Bollywood, OTT, Social Media, South and Bhojpuri cinema, and Television and VOTE to make their favourites win. The awards are held virtually, preceded by Masterclasses with Shahid Kapoor, Yami Gautam, Abbas Tyrewala and more and included panel discussions with the likes of Rasika Dugal, Abhishek Banerjee, Ulka Gupta, Saiyami Kher amongst others.

    Stay tuned to BollywoodLife for the latest scoops and updates from Bollywood, Hollywood, South, TV and Web-Series.
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  • Mettl’s CEO Honored With Economic Times 40 Under 40 Entrepreneurship Award

    Mettl’s CEO Honored With Economic Times 40 Under 40 Entrepreneurship Award

    The Economic Times presented Ketan Kapoor, Co-Founder, and CEO of Mettl with their 40-under-40 award of 2017. Loads of disruptors, marketers, media-shakers, entrepreneurs and the likes descended on the grand venue for the prestigious 40-under-40 awards event, organized by The Economic Times in Mumbai.

    Ketan, an IIT-IIM alumnus, co-founded Mettl in the year 2009. With the vision of leading online assessments in the market, he along with his college friend, Tonmoy Shingal set out to build a SaaS based product that improves and simplifies the hiring process while maintaining top notch quality.

    Well-known journalist and the author of ‘The World is flat’ Thomas Friedman has written about Mettl and its technological impact in New York Times. And the list doesn’t end there. Mettl was also declared the winners of the India Emerging 20 Award and the Michael Porter & IFC-Mint Strategy Award for Technology Enabled Assessments, held annually to recognize and honor the best Indian companies in different niche categories.

    Ketan Kapoor, Co-Founder, CEO, Mettl

    In the early days of this start-up, leaders at Mettl realized that online assessments as a process were much broader than what they had thought it would be. Gradually picking up momentum and gathering a team of technical experts, Mettl worked its way up the ladder to become the awe-inspiring success story among start-ups in India.

    Today, with over 6 million assessments daily, Mettl is one of the largest and fastest growing talent measurement company in India. It works with the top corporates, education institutions and government bodies across the globe, providing solutions like psychometric assessments, cognitive assessments, and domain assessments through their robust online platform coupled with the unique state of the art ‘Remote Proctoring Technology’.

    Under Ketan and Tonmoy’s leadership, Mettl has reached a customer base of over 1500 corporates, 28 sector skill councils/government departments and 20 educational institutions with a global presence in over 80 countries. While delivering great customer success for some of the corporate giants like SAP, Accenture, Maruti Suzuki and Zydus, Mettl also serves education institutes like ISB, Amity, and UPES among many others.

    Some of the key differentiators that fuel Mettl’s massive growth are its ability to customize solutions, deep analytic, and operational excellence to conduct assessments in every nook and corner. The robust online platform has a significant role in making sure that the whole process is scalable, cost-effective and faster. These benefits gave Ketan’s nascent ideas the necessary wings to fly above the conventional pen-paper test mechanism.

    Mettl has won various accolades in the recent past. NSDC has selected Mettl as one of the 14 companies to drive innovation in the skills area in India. Well-known journalist and the author of ‘The World is flat’ Thomas Friedman has written about Mettl and its technological impact in New York Times.

    And the list doesn’t end there. Mettl was also declared the winners of the India Emerging 20 Award and the Michael Porter & IFC-Mint Strategy Award for Technology Enabled Assessments, held annually to recognize and honor the best Indian companies in different niche categories.

    Source: Mettl

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