Musings, observations, and written works from the publisher of Eckhartz Press, the media critic for the Illinois Entertainer, co-host of Minutia Men, Minutia Men Celebrity Interview and Free Kicks, and the author of "The Loop Files", "Back in the D.D.R", "EveryCubEver", "The Living Wills", "$everance," "Father Knows Nothing," "The Radio Producer's Handbook," "Records Truly Is My Middle Name", and "Gruen Weiss Vor".
This year marks my 20th year as a professional writer. Over the course of 2024, I'll be sharing a few of those offerings you may have missed along the way.
In 2005, Pat Colander called me up and said she was starting up a new magazine called Shore Magazine. She wondered if I had anything to contribute to the first issue. This is what I sent her.
It ended up being the cover story for the first ever issue of Shore Magazine in December 2005. It's called "The Santa Threat"
You may not know the name Haven Gillespie, but if you’re a parent, he has given you the gift that keeps on giving. Since 1934, American parents have quoted this wise Kentucky philosopher on a regular basis; especially during the months between September and December. J. Fred Coots may have written the music that makes Gillespie’s words more memorable, but it’s the words themselves that have resonated with parents.
Haven Gillespie wrote the lyrics for “Santa Claus is Coming to Town.”
While it’s certain that parents used the Santa threat well before Gillespie wrote the lyrics for that song, he gave the threat credibility. I think that’s the secret to the song’s longevity—a reason why it has become a standard; a beloved holiday song. The music may be warm and comforting, but the lyrics are a none-too-subtle threat.
You better watch out, You better not cry, You better not pout, I’m telling you why, Santa Claus is coming to town
If you’re a parent that hasn’t quoted that song at one time or another, then you’re a saint. The temptation is simply too strong. When the little darlings are acting up, crying, or whining, and it’s during those glorious months between September and December, a simple humming of this song will often stop them in their tracks. It’s the Santa threat.
Sure, Santa brings presents, but he’s a little scary.
You better watch out!
Sure, Santa brings presents, but he hates whiners.
You better not cry You better not pout
Parents may have told their kids this before 1934, but when the words are in a song, they have gravitas. Keep in mind this song was written during the Great Depression when children already knew they weren’t going to get much. The 1934 Santa had a much smaller bag, and he wasn’t going to bother putting toys in that bag for whiners or complainers. That must have been pretty obvious to kids in 1934, but I’m still glad Gillespie put it in the song. It’s not obvious to my kids. As a matter of fact, between January and September, I tell them not to whine, cry, and pout all the time—and it’s like I’m saying ‘blah, blah, blah.’ But during the autumn months, I simply sing Gillespie’s wonderful lyrics. It gives my words power and meaning, because…
Santa Claus is coming to town.
While the first verse is great for handling simple whining and crying problems, the second verse of the song is positively visionary. This is the verse that lets my kids know that the entire matter is out of my hands. I’d love to help them out, but I’m not the one keeping the list; Santa is. Take it up with the bald fat man at the North Pole. He’s the one that controls the presents, and he’s not around, so you’re wasting your breath begging me. What is the kindly old man doing right now?
He’s making a list, He’s checking it twice.
I have probably said those words a thousand times in my ten years of parenthood. My oldest son Tommy nods knowingly when I sing it. Don’t question Santa. The man is a stickler for detail. Dad forgets things all the time, but he’s not keeping a list. That Santa character is the real deal. I once heard Tommy explaining to his little brother that Santa has people everywhere—a network of spies that rivals the KGB. You may run, but you can’t hide. Don’t believe me? Listen to the words…
He’s going to find out who’s naughty and nice.
I know I’m speaking for most parents in this country when I say: Thank you Haven Gillespie. Thank you for the crying, thank you for the pouting, thank you for the list, and thank you for making him check it twice, and thank you for not mincing words. It’s the “N” word, kids. It’s naughty. Case closed. You probably just made the list, and Santa isn’t the kind of guy who fools around. He’s a stalker.
He sees you when you’re sleeping,
That’s probably the scariest line in the song. I like to sing it in a sinister voice. He knows when you’re awake.
I’m betting that not many parents use that line, but I have two boys who share a room. I’ve opened the door on school nights more than a few times to sing that line. It silences the boys instantly—like magic. I love that line, but not as much as I love the refrain. It’s what gives the song a happy ending—a course of action. He knows if you’ve been bad or good, So be good for goodness sake.
Now that’s just the Santa threat in the most direct terms possible, but it comes with a positive message, even if it’s said through a forced smile. When a child is pouting, or whining, or wailing, or fighting, or doing anything at all other than what Mom and Dad want them to do, the solution is right there. Be good for goodness sake.
Got it? Good. Now go to your room.
Most kids don’t even know the rest of the song. The next few verses are full of boys and girls having a jubilee, and kiddie cars and curly head dolls…but kids have a very hard time remembering those verses. The message of the first two verses and the refrain are still ringing in their darling little ears.
And for that, we should all thank Haven Gillespie.
If he hadn’t passed away in 1975, we would be calling him right now to commission another song. By ten in the morning on December 25th, if you try the Santa threat again, even if you sing the most powerful holiday song of all time, you will probably get a reaction something like this:
“Santa’s already been here. Look at all these presents! He loves me!”
I know I speak for most parents when I say it’s time for a new song to cover the time from December 25th to September 1st. That’s a long time to parent without such a powerful threat. Consider this a plea to the Haven Gillespie of the 21st century. I don’t want to be greedy, but if the words could say something about video games being taken away forever, that would be great.
December
2, 2010—Alka Seltzer brings back Speedy character
=This time with Debbi
Derryberry as the voice. She is also the voice of Jimmy Neutron and the aliens from Toy Story, and yes she did all three voices for us in this episode.
December
3, 1987—Heavenly Bodies opens in Elk Grove
=Yes, we did a radio ad for the strip joint. Maybe we'll play it in this week's episode.
December
4, 1998—Debut of Blitzen the Unloved Reindeer
=I dreamt the words to this song while I was John Landecker's producer, and yes it's weird. But we did record it. I have a soft spot in my heart for it.
December
4, 2018—Rick and Tommy in New York for Orbital concert
=My son Tommy is an EDM critic on YouTube with tens of thousands of followers. A few of them recognized him and approached him in the audience of the Orbital concert in Brooklyn. Proud moment for ol' Dad. Here we are in Times Square.
December
5, 1999—Stuart Little released
=Four year old Tommy Kaempfer reviewed it on the Landecker show. Hmmm. Maybe that whole critic thing was inside him the whole time.
December
5, 2017—Ken Bone appears on Bill Maher
=Ken told us what that whirlwind part of his life was like on this episode.
=A few photos from Dan McNeil's launch party this past weekend at Bridges in Griffith Indiana. Dan’s launch party was a huge hit. Thanks to everyone who came out. It was a great afternoon. This book about the dysfunctional Chicago Bears could not be more timely. This week (Thursday night) Dan will be doing a signing at Doc's Smokehouse and Craft bar on Calumet Avenue in Dyer, Indiana from 6-9pm. Stop by and pick up a copy.
IN “I BEAR WITNESS,” McNeil summons some of the very best still within both as a sports media guy and a passionate Bears fan.
He presents some chippy and some verse about why this organization apparently so fears sustained success. “I think the biggest thing 'I Bear Witness' does is illuminate 'McCaskeyism,'” McNeil said. “Interference that led to failed coaching hires. Big things like not spending on facilities or free agents to little but still meaningful things like going on the cheap for Super Bowl rings.
“'I Bear Witness' exposes the Misers of the Midway.”
THAT THE MCCASKEY BEARS ARE both operational failures and of severe disrespect to the legacy of family patriarch George Halas is unassailable. And the harder they try to steer, the worse it gets, as CBS telecast to the nation in the final seconds of Thursday's surreal ending at Ford Field.
=You'll start seeing and hearing the Rosenbaums on the airwaves too. On Thursday morning Carl Rosenbaum will be on WLS Radio with Ray Stevens at 8:20am, and on Monday (the 9th), they'll both be on WGN-TV at 11:15am.
=Happy birthday to one of the big stars of The Loop Files, Garry Meier. Garry was with the Loop during both of the Loop heydays (late 70s, late 80s) and was very cooperative with the book project. (Photo: L-R, Garry, Dave Logan, Steve Dahl)
=This week in 2023 (December 6), author Rick Kaempfer appeared on Scott Miller's radio show in downstate Illinois. Johnny B, Buzz, Kevin Matthews, and others contributed to the interview. You can check it out here.
=Also this week in 2023 (December 5), this great review of the book was posted by Paul McVay...
Rick Kaempfer's The Loop Files (Eckhartz Press-350 pgs.-2023) covers those groundbreaking years with an intimate style. Ditching the worn-out approach that other books covering similar subject matter have taken, Kaempfer lays out the relevant twenty-year history of the radio station, its on-air staff, and the behind-the-scenes personnel (who, more often than not, were just as responsible for the success of both versions of The Loop) in a deft and personal way that places us, the former listener, in some rarified-air where we can re-live those radio experiences again with some considerable back-story.
Layed out in first person, told by the guys and gals who were there, the book is an immediate time capsule of what happened during those years, and no punches are pulled. It is exactly what we wanted, and because Rick Kaempfer is a former Jock and producer at The Loop, his access to those that worked in front of the mic, or way behind it in a tape-filled, cramped postage-stamped sized office, is unprecedented.
The Loop Files is the elegy all die-hard Loop FM 98 fans deserve and have been waiting for since 2018, when the station was practically given away during owner Cumulus Radio's bankruptcy. The truth is, the absolute heyday of The Loop happened during the years Rick Kaempfer documents in this book, and he does a tremendous job of letting his interview subjects tell that story in full. It reads as a labor of love written by a listener who became an employee and now wants to share that knowledge with anyone who ever was entertained by listening to The Loop.
=St. Nicholas day (December 6) reminds us that the holiday season is approaching, and at Eckhartz Press our signature holiday book is Donald G. Evans book An Off-White Christmas. Pick up your copy today.
=This week in 2018 (December 1), Don and his illustrator Hannah made an appearance at Oak Park Library.
=The following night (December 2), the book was performed live on stage. It was an incredible thing to see...
=This week in 2018 (December 1) was the 60th anniversary of the Lady of our Angels school fire. Alex Burkholder made the rounds that day, talking about his book, which was about that tragic fire. Here is a Q&A with Alex. He also appeared at a firehouse, selling and signing the book, and leading a discussion about that day. A few of the photos are below. Alex passed away earlier this year.
=This week in 2018 (December 1), we also held a launch party in the Wicker Park neighborhood of Chicago for The Scar Dance by William Mansfield. The book was later named a finalist for CWA Book of the Year.
=This week in 2012 (December 3), the book A Reluctant Immigrant was released. Author Felitzitas Sudendorf combined the story of her immigration to America with a cookbook featuring recipes from her native land. It was the only book released under our imprint Helgard Press. A totally unique book that sold quite well in the German community of Chicago. Unfortunately, Sudendorf passed away less than a year later.
=This week in 2015 (December 1), the Eckhartz Press book Grun Weiss Vor! was released. The book chronicles the history of one of Chicago's historic soccer clubs, Green White, on the eve of their 60th anniversary. Authors Rick Kaempfer and Todd Schneider were on hand to sign and sell copies of the book.
=Need a good traveling book this holiday season? Take a cue from this post on Facebook...
Roger Badesch wrote my very most favorite traveling book: easy to read in short sections (for when I inevitably fall asleep on the plane or when the lines are longer than expected) and fun to tell other people about when they ask what I'm reading! So far it's kept me company this week in Baltimore and Boston, and we're headed to NM tomorrow. 🤗 If you don't have it yet, strong recommend!
=Two of the sports stars featured in Randy Merkin's book Behind the Glass are celebrating birthdays this week. The great receiver Terrell Owens (December 7) gets his own chapter in the book, as does one of the rare Chicago Cubs who played ten seasons for the North Siders, the last man standing from the World Series Cubs, Kyle Hendricks (December 7).
=This week in 2022 (December 7), Chuck Swirsky had a book signing at the United Center before a Bulls game. The Bulls announcer did the pre-game show, then zipped into the gift shop to sign and sell books, then zipped back upstairs to broadcast the game.
=For those of you who have a copy of one of the editions of EveryCubEver (there are currently six of them), here are a few Cubs to check out this week. All were born this week in history: Big Ed Reulbach (December 1), Andre Rogers (December 2), Cozy Dolan (December 3), Lee Smith (December 4), PK Wrigley (December 5), and Stan Hack (December 6). Great stories about all of them are found in EveryCubEver.
=Plus this photo. Those are Hall of Famers Fergie Jenkins and Lee Smith high-fiving over the head of author Rick Kaempfer's son Sean.
=Jim Slusher's book is filled with some of the great columns he has written over his 25 years at the Daily Herald. One of them was in the newspaper on this day in 2001. It was his tribute to the recently deceased Beatles great George Harrison. Worth the price of admission.
=The characters that weave in and out of the lives of Mob Adjacent authors Jeffrey and Michael Gentile include some of the most notorious mobsters in Chicago history. One of them, Joey Doves Aiuppa, was born this week (December 1) in 1907. At one time he was the leader of the Chicago Outfit.
=Vicki Quade's book about her encounters with the every day people of Chicago is split into sections. One of those sections is about her encounters in her car. Seems like a good week to point that out, as the first assembly line for the Model T car was unveiled this week (December 1) in 1913.
=This week in 2014 (December 3), Rick Kaempfer made an appearance on WLS Radio's morning show, talking about his book Father Knows Nothing. At the time, the hosts of the morning show were Bruce Wolf and Dan Proft. Dan is now at WIND, and Bruce hosts his own podcast.
=We never thought this book would make a comeback, but here we are. Melania impersonator Lauren LoGiudice wrote all about her experiences traveling around the country doing her comedy show. Other comedians took notice, and one of them, Ritch Shydner, is celebrating a birthday this week (December 3). Here's what he said about Lauren's book...
“When I first spotted the cover of “Inside Melania,” I couldn’t think of anyone I was less interested in learning more about than that soulless gold-digger. Then I opened the book and couldn’t put it down. Lauren masterfully used satire, parody and irony to process the Slovenian Ice Queen through every comedic literary device in the English language, from fairy tales to dirty nursery rhymes to rap. Lauren’s book returned me to the essential power and joy of good comedy, and showed me there were a lot of laughs inside a soulless gold-digger.”
- Ritch Shydner, author of Kicking Through The Ashes - My Life As A Stand-up in the 1980’s Comedy Boom
=We still remember the day that Chet called us up all excited about the latest endorsement he received for his book. Skip Bayless is celebrating a birthday this week (December 4), but Chet was celebrating when Skip delivered this blurb for the book...
I bought a copy of your book and I read it…and it’s sensational. Great stories and off-camera, off-mike insights. You truly are a legend.
Skip Bayless, legendary broadcaster and columnist
=This week in 2019 (December 3), Rick Kaempfer eulogized Chet (and fellow Eckhartz Press author Pat Colander) in his Illinois Entertainer media column. You can read that here.
=One of Joel Daly's long-time co-anchors at Channel 7 was Linda Yu. They had a great relationship on and off camera. Linda often joked that Joel was like her father. That's the explanation behind her endorsement of Joel's book below. This week (December 1) is Linda's birthday.
You may have trusted him for years as he brought you the news. You may have been entertained when you heard him yodel. You may have thrilled to his Renaissance man exploits as world traveler, pilot, actor, and lawyer. Read this book to find out why he became all those things…and why Joel Daly is my Dad.
=This week in 1951 (December 5), the legendary Shoeless Joe Jackson died. 27 years before his death Jackson sat in a courtroom in Milwaukee as he tried to clear his name from the Black Sox scandal. Last year (2023), nearly a hundred years after the trial, Dr. David Fletcher and Jason Pomrenke got their hands on the trial transcript. We were happy to publish this historical document at Eckhartz Press. It's the only published account of the trial.
=A few rock stars that have birthdays this week are also featured in Bobby Skafish's great rock and roll interview book We Have Company. Tom Waits (December 7) and REM guitarist Peter Buck (December 6) both get their own chapters in Bobby's book.
=Also, ten years ago this week Chicago writer Dave Hoekstra debuted his radio show Nocturnal Journal on WGN Radio. One of the guests Dave had in the studio was none other than Bobby Skafish...
=For some reason, 2017 was the Year of the Truffle. This week in 2017 (December 6), we went to our very own truffle expert, author of the foodie novel Truffle Hunt, Brent Petersen, to get an explanation of why. You can read his treatise on the Truffle year of 2017 here.
=This week in 1893 (December 7), Virginia Kirkus was born. She became the founder of Kirkus Reviews, which is a highly respected reviewer. Kirkus has reviewed about a dozen of our books, including Bob Boone's City U. Here's what they said...
“Boone’s economical use of dialogue serves a dual purpose, as characters reveal questionable attitudes in a small amount of space or, more often, withhold uncomfortable truths from themselves and others. These layered, often humorous classroom insights are buoyed by the author’s lean, clear writing style.”
--Kirkus Reviews
=This week in 1970 (December 1), Chicago Magazine became a full-size magazine. In 2002, they named Bob Boone as Chicagoan of the Year.
=This week in 2012 (December 7), Living Wills co-author Rick Kaempfer was asked to participate in an interview called The Next Big Thing. Among the things you'll learn in this interview is the inspiration for the book, who would/could play the parts of the main characters, and more. You can read it here. (Photo: Living Wills co-authors Rick and Brendan)