![]() Along with all of that, she’s the Programming Coordinator for OrcaCon, she often speaks on issues of diversity, feminism, race, intersectionality & other topics at multiple conventions throughout the year. Now she’s a co-host on Spawn on Me Podcast. She founded and was the EIC of Fresh Out of Tokens podcast where games culture was discussed and viewed through a lense of feminism, intersectionality and diversity. Tanya is a lifelong Chicagoan who loves everything about gaming, #INeedDiverseGames spawn point, and wants to make it better and more inclusive for everyone. I Need Diverse Games serves the community by supporting marginalized developers attend the Game Developer Conference by participating in the GDC Scholarship program, helps assist attendance at other industry events, and is seeking partnership with organizations and initiatives. Tanya DePass is the founder and Director of I Need Diverse Games, a non-profit organization based in Chicago, which is dedicated to better diversification of all aspects of gaming. I’d jump off the Sears Tower before I’d jump on the Cubs’ bandwagon. They’ll be going crazy in Wrigleyville and in every house that bleeds Cubbie blue.īut for me it’ll be about as exciting as the Cardinals beating the Tigers last year. We got there first, and that can never change.īeyond that, I have too many good friends (and even a family member or two) who are Cubs fans. I know it’ll be a bigger deal in the city and certainly nationwide than a Sox championship - but we already have our framed ticket stubs and our 2005 memories. For one thing, the Sox already got there first, so no matter when the Cubs finally win a World Series, they’ll be second in line. You’ll go to certain bars in certain neighborhoods, and they’ll have the game on - but the locals will be rooting for the Mets or the Diamondbacks or the Phillies, or the American League representative if (God forbid) the Cubs are in the World Series. That’ll be the prevailing sentiment in Sox Country if the Cubs are in the playoffs. I could be in the bleachers at Wrigley Field and I could catch the World Series-winning home run ball, and I still wouldn’t catch a whiff of Cubs Fever.Īs I’ve mentioned before, the lyrics to “South Side Irish” sum up how many Sox fans feel about their North Side rivals: It’s like watching the Mets or the Indians enjoying first place. When I see the Budweiser commercial with all those good-looking Cubs fans having the time of their lives when I see the postgame singalong to Steve Goodman’s “Go Cubs Go” when I watch the saturation coverage on the local sportscasts - I don’t hate it like some of my fellow Sox fans hate it, but I don’t feel it, either. ![]() Nobody cares about your regular season record if you win the whole thing. They’ve got some big, veteran bats and some strong arms, and an Old World manager who has this weird thing about him - he actually plays the guys who deserve to play.īarring a huge collapse, the Cubs will make the playoffs, and there’s no reason to believe they can’t make a serious run, a la last year’s Cardinals. The question is, is the year of little Wrigley’s birth the year the Cubs finally go all the way?Īs a baseball fan who keeps watching the pennant races even after my team is so far out of it they might as well be playing flag football, I’ve been keeping up with the Cubbies these last few weeks, and I gotta say it:Ĭertainly better than Milwaukee, and probably as talented as any team in the National League. That kid’s gonna be a Cubs fan for life whether he likes it or not. In the 1990s, a few Bulls fans named their children “Jordan.” That’s not a bad first name, and you can always tell people you named your girl after the Jordan Baker character in The Great Gatsby.īut Wrigley Fields - not much doubt as to the origin of that name. Cellular Field,” but I wouldn’t be surprised if there’s a Fenway Park(s) or two living in the Boston area, even though I couldn’t find any via a few of those name-search databases. I’m sure there’s nobody out there named “U.S. This is the first I’ve heard of a child named Wrigley. (At least they didn’t name him Strawberry.)įast forward to the year 2030, when a 23-year-old man approaches a young woman at Sluggers after a Cubs game and says, “Nice to meet you, my name is Wrigley Fields.” Cubs fans Paul and Teri Fields have named their wee lad Wrigley Alexander Fields. ![]() Have you heard about the couple that named their child Wrigley Fields? Maybe three-fifths of the city, but not everyone. “The whole city of Chicago is really pumped up, isn’t it?” Many in city are immune to Cubs fever! Finally, someone gets itĮven if this is finally the year, Sox fans still got there first
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