Community Corner
Freddie Gray White Sox Joke on Twitter Inspires Anger, Disgust
Chicago media personality Bruce Wolf happy he lit up Twitter, feels bad he hurt feelings, says he just wants to be loved.

Sox in their Freddie Gray road uniforms in Baltimore tonight.
— Bruce Wolf (@BruceWolfChi) April 30, 2016
Freddie Gray is the 25-year-old Baltimore man with a record of minor drug and petty theft crimes who died in police custody one year ago. He went into a coma in a police van after suffering a spinal cord injury. His death sparked riots in Baltimore, was later ruled a homicide and now six police officers are on trial.
Friday was the one-year anniversary of the eerie night game the White Sox and Orioles played to an empty stadium because of the citywide curfew in effect to stem the violence.
And who's Bruce Wolf, you ask?
He's been on the air in Chicago one way or another since the 1980s, talking about sports and politics, on WLS-AM, WFLD-TV and WMAQ-TV. He's also a part-time divorce lawyer. He likes to push buttons. In the past, the 62-year-old North Shore native's talk of racial matters has blown up in his face.
Wolf's Friday tweet blew up Twitter, as Twitter is wont to do:
@BruceWolfChi we will not allow the senseless killing and brutality affecting our youth, to be used as some pithy punch line. This was dumb!
— Credible Threat (@BaltoSpectator) April 30, 2016
@BruceWolfChi As a matter of fact, you need to lose your job. We're watching you boss.
— Sean Yoes (@seanyoes) April 30, 2016
.@BruceWolfChi pic.twitter.com/m0nn87FNhc
— affable doofus (@JawnMalkovich) April 30, 2016
.@BruceWolfChi pic.twitter.com/ug4cpHYXyL
— Dan C (@danman253) April 30, 2016
And Saturday, Wolf replied (taking special aim at Chicago media writer Robert Feder, who's busted on Bruce Wolf's trenchant commentary and career several times):
I understand Robert Feder tweeted that if I weren't already unemployed I would be now. And if Robert Feder had any balls, he wouldn't hide.
— Bruce Wolf (@BruceWolfChi) April 30, 2016
You'd think @robertfeder would write about how I lit up Twitter. Who knew? I mean it's not as big as Bob & Marianne's cheesecake, but still.
— Bruce Wolf (@BruceWolfChi) April 30, 2016
Wolf says he's just misunderstood.
I do feel bad I hurt some feelings. I want to be loved and make a point, which I guess is impossible. People shouldn't forget what happened.
— Bruce Wolf (@BruceWolfChi) April 30, 2016
Don't we all just want to be loved? Using a horrible death and a city's pain probably isn't the best way to show this. Neither would using a baseball game or a bad pun be the way to remind people about "what happened."
What point do you think Wolf was trying to make?
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