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Northern Star

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The Student News Site of Northern Illinois University

Northern Star

The Student News Site of Northern Illinois University

Northern Star

Two’s a crowd for number two

By Brayton Cameron | March 24, 2005

Since I consider myself a social critic, it is important for me to ask, "What are we doing to our children?" The answer is never a simple one, but it is often unexpected. While shopping in a local superstore, I visited the bathroom. I entered the stall...

The coffee break of dawn

By Derek Wright | March 24, 2005

It is 1:57 a.m. on a Monday and Katy Pappas is serving, of all things, coffee. The junior education major has worked at The Junction Eating Place, 816 W. Lincoln Highway, for eight months - all late-night shifts. Tonight the diner’s clientele looks...

A break from classes, not from dignity

By Mark Bieganski | March 24, 2005

Some people lost their virginity on Spring Break, but many more lose something else - their dignity. Neither of those are things to brag to mom about when you get home from a drawn out Spring Break hot spot. But that didn’t keep plenty of MTV "look...

Evens: Great Destroyer

By Kelly Johnson | March 24, 2005

Ian MacKaye is getting old. A glance at the back of the debut album from The Evens, MacKaye collaboration with fellow Dischord alumna Amy Farina, shows a picture of a craggy MacKaye with his not-so-new receding hairline beginning to show gray around the...

J. Lo: Rebirth

By Lady C | March 24, 2005

Good ol’ Jenny from the block returns with her fourth album "Rebirth." For most artists to be able to stick around and make this many albums means they have talent. But in this case, it just isn’t so. J. Lo is just about the money and uses her beauty...

Touring expert makes a home at Otto’s

By Collin Quick | March 24, 2005

n the offices of Otto’s Niteclub, 118 E. Lincoln Highway, is a small room with wood-paneled walls and carpeting that faded years ago. A fluorescent lighting fixture hangs overhead, but its flickering resembles a camera flash. The only light source comes from the hallway and a lamp situated on a desk.

Nort Johnson sits behind this desk. Even though he’s approaching 50, he wears a black hoodie. He has a grayish-white beard and his hair hangs about two inches beyond his shoulders. He is wide-eyed and has the look of constant surprise on his face, even as he leans back in his chair, puts both hands behind his head and tells story after story, with motivational quotes mixed in.

His resume includes titles such as roadie, production manager, journalist, editor, publisher, husband, brother, father and grandfather. Johnson now can add one more title to the list: booking agent.

Johnson has been in the music business for more than 30 years, a lifestyle he said is a bit out of the norm. He started out as a roadie at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago back in the ’70s.

"I would basically wait for the tour staff to either pass out or [overdose] and then I would take over," Johnson said. "It was a great way to make $10."

After hitchhiking around the country for a while, Johnson ended up back in Chicago and started working in lighting and sound production at venues such as the now-defunct Tuts and CODs. It was around this time that he began booking punk bands.

"I brought bands such as the Dead Kennedys and Black Flag to Chicago for the first time," Johnson said. "The first time that R.E.M. played Chicago, 12 people paid to see them."

After the birth of his son in 1980, Johnson started a lighting production company and began touring with the likes of Kansas and worked at area festivals.

"I learned from people in the business along the way and I had a lot of respect for them," Johnson said.

His first shot at journalism was an article about Styx in 1988. After several more articles, Johnson started "Showcase Music Magazine" in which he was both the editor and publisher. His writing soon earned him numerous awards and he began to focus his writing on concert production. Within a few years, he was granted exclusive rights as the only journalist on Pearl Jam’s 1995 tour. In 2002, he archived the Rolling Stones Forty Licks tour, the largest touring production in history.

"It took three days to set up the outdoor stage," Johnson said. "[It] was 13 stories tall, had five-and-a-half tons of [public address system] on each side and had a $6 million video screen."

After working on the Jay-Z/R. Kelly tour this past fall, Johnson decided he wanted to slow down.

"I’ve seen firsthand what this business can do to people," Johnson said. "I’ve seen what money, drugs and success can do. I have to be careful what I say about that tour."

So what brings Johnson to Otto’s?

Maybe it’s the fact he’s moving out to the country. Maybe it’s because he loves working with a generation that keeps him young at heart. Maybe it’s because he’s best friends with Stan Doty, Wilco’s sound engineer and owner of Otto’s. Then again, maybe it’s because he loves a challenge.

"We’re hopping to open it up to bigger and better shows," Johnson said. "We want more people to come and hang out."

Johnson said bands looking to play Otto’s will find an extremely high level of professionalism.

"If you’re going to step into the ring with me, you better have your gloves on and they better be tied tight," Johnson said.

Johnson and the staff are giving the place a makeover as well. So far, the underground has been cleaned up, various parts of the venue are receiving new coats of paint and Johnson personally replaced all the burned-out lights in the Main Room.

"Everyone is on the same page now," Johnson said. "We all have a common goal and we’re all headed in the same direction."

With some new blood running through the venue, music fanatics and Otto’s patrons alike can expect only good things to come from the downtown establishment which Johnson has already begun to shed some new light upon.

"We definitely have some surprises lined up over the next couple months," Johnson said with a smile on his face as he leaned back in his chair.

Have you Pimped your Ride

By Derek Wright | March 24, 2005

Two weeks ago WE put out a call to anyone with a "pimped ride." The feedback was fantastic, as dozens of DeKalb residents and NIU students responded with stories, photos and information about their enhanced automobiles. But the search is not over yet....

Graduate student has a genetic love of poetry

By Greg Feltes | March 23, 2005

Beth Denton has poetry flowing through her veins in more ways than one. Denton, a graduate student in early childhood education, said her love of sonnets and haikus that began at an early age might be genetic. "I won a PTA poetry contest as a seventh-grader...

Unlocking the mysteries behind books

By Mark Pietrowski | March 22, 2005

Nancy Adams grew up reading Nancy Drew novels and now regularly solves the Founders Memorial Library’s biggest mysteries - which books to buy and how to pay for them. Adams, a library technical assistant, has worked in the Founders Memorial Library’s...

Fantasy baseball keeps fans in the game

By Rachel Gorr | March 21, 2005

What’s more exciting than watching Paul Konerko hit a home run in the bottom of the ninth to win a big game? Making it your own accomplishment, of course. After decades of shouting at the television, man has found a way to feel more in control of America’s...

Sweeps searches for best Spring Break photo, entries due Wednesday

By Greg Feltes | March 21, 2005

How was your Spring Break? Fun? Exciting? Photogenic? Sweeps hopes so. We are now accepting digital or hard copy entries for our first-ever best Spring Break photo contest. Submissions will be judged on uniqueness, lighting, sharpness and wildness. Essentially,...

Let Jay-Z say it for you

By Chris Strupp | March 10, 2005

Wanting to go to bed, but having to go to the bathroom at 2 a.m. one day, I found that my shower was running. Thinking nothing of it, I go back downstairs to wait. To my surprise, the shower was not only occupied by my roommate but by his lady friend...