The Gene Pool Show

Studio C Chicago

The Gene Pool Show is a podcast tour of the musical and artistic talent of Chicago’s Andersonville neighborhood (and beyond). It’s funny, informative, and full of heart. And it’s produced in Studio C.

Episodes

  1. Episode 7: Keith Lipinski

    10/15/2019

    Episode 7: Keith Lipinski

    In this episode Gene talks to longtime Simon's Tavern jukebox curator Keith Lipinski. A native of Berwyn, Keith moved to Chicago in 1997 and started working the door at Simon's two years later. Having first been drawn to Simon's by its jukebox, he says he got a musical education from the bar's then head bartender. "When he left," Keith says, "it all the sudden came upon these shoulders to take care of the jukebox." He tells Gene that he felt a little overwhelmed by the job at first, but after a few weeks things "smoothed out" when patrons recognized that he knew what he was doing. In time, that recognition would come from the Chicago Reader's Best of Chicago poll, which has given Simon's best jukebox honors four times. Keith says he was always a big music fan, remembering that "in college times, when friends of mine were going on dates or doing drugs, I was just listening to a lot of great music and hanging out at a lot of great record stores in Chicago, picking up as much music as possible." Going back further, he says MTV raised him, "and that also helped my musical education and pedigree." Keith talks about his approach to stocking Simon's CD jukebox with "a little bit of everything" and how he thinks of it as his third kid. "And I had the juke before I had either of the kids, so they should know the pecking order," he jokes. He now works at the bar only about once a month but is still drawn to the "Simon's room.” “It's hard to describe,” he says, “but it's almost like magic to me, where if you have the perfect song going on at the perfect time, it's really, really good."

    44 min
  2. Episode 6: Marc Kelly Smith

    09/01/2019

    Episode 6: Marc Kelly Smith

    On Episode 6 Gene talks to Marc Kelly Smith, founder of the world-famous Uptown Poetry Slam. Smith talks about the event's humble beginnings at the now-defunct Get Me High Lounge in Wicker Park. At that time, poetry readings were sparsely attended. "If you had 10 people, you were successful," Smith recalls. But there was another problem: "They were all so very self-indulgent, snobbish, cliquish. Here's this passionate art form and everybody is presenting it very boring, like a professor in class." Inventing the event as he went along, Smith looked for poets "with a natural flair for performing," though, at the time, he says, "poets did not take performance seriously." Smith believes that pairing poetry with performance "created a higher art form." In the summer of 1986, Smith's event moved to its current home, the Green Mill, when the historic Uptown tavern was reopened by Dave Jemilo. There Smith transferred everything he had learned at the Get Me High and watched the poetry slam grow from five people showing up to "nights with 80 people in the audience." In time, the slam became not only a beloved Chicago institution but a worldwide phenomenon, playing to audiences of hundreds in Europe and Asia. Despite having always kept his "private life pretty private," Smith opens up to Gene, relating stories of his "extreme love-hate relationship with the stage" and struggles he’s had with stage fright. He also touches on his time growing up on Chicago's "blue-collar" Southeast Side, where he discovered his "knack for writing" -- despite not having attempted to read a book until the seventh grade. That book, recommended to him by a teacher, changed his life.

    56 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

The Gene Pool Show is a podcast tour of the musical and artistic talent of Chicago’s Andersonville neighborhood (and beyond). It’s funny, informative, and full of heart. And it’s produced in Studio C.