Communication sophomore Alex Slabic’s debut as a social media influencer began on a whim. When a friend needed a high school graduation banner, Slabic picked up a paintbrush, turned on her video and recorded her signmaking process. She posted it on TikTok, where“literally out of nowhere, it just went viral,” Slabic said. That spontaneous post became the spark for Signs by Alex, a custom hand-painted banner business that has since taken off on both TikTok and Instagram. In just a year and a half, the Texas A&M sophomore has gone from a high school creative to a small business owner collaborating with national craft brands. Within just seven months of launching her brand on Instagram, Slabic’s following skyrocketed to 100, 000 followers, and she hasn’t slowed down since. As of late October, her Instagram had surpassed the 500, 000-follower mark, while her TikTok account now boasts over 221, 000 followers. Like many modern entrepreneurs, Slabic’s story began online. After her first viral TikTok drew thousands of views and messages from people eager to place orders, she decided to turn her creative hobby into something bigger. “I still run it completely by myself because I don’t want it to get too big or stressful,” Slabic said. “But I recently hired a brand manager who talks to companies like Michael’s and Home Depot for me. That’s been amazing since emailing them was so scary at first.” As a full-time college student, Slabic carefully balances coursework with running her business. Between classes, exams and fulfilling banner orders for customers nationwide, her days are full. Her fast-paced life means every second of the day counts, and Slabic has managed to balance lectures and line work with great precision. Her time management skills have become just as important as her artistic talents. “I always keep my planner updated,” Slabic said. “I paint in the mornings before school because the lighting’s better. When I get home, it’s too dark for photos or videos.” Slabic has learned to treat her mornings as her creative window, dedicating her early hours to painting before the campus rush begins. She shifts her afternoons to editing videos and responding to customer messages. Her process is simple but organized: clients contact her through direct message to start things off. She then sends an order form, designs each banner about two months in advance and ships them out across the country. Her banners can vary in size and pricing with her smallest being $175 for a 5-feet-by-30 inch banner and her largest being $215 for a 6-feet-by-35 inch banner. Each order represents a personal connection from graduation celebrations to engagement parties and knowing that her role plays a part in people’s milestones keeps her motivated, Slabic said. Still, it hasn’t been without challenges. Balancing her creativity with consistency on social media can be tough, especially when every post and video must meet the audience expectations. Slabic admits that staying inspired while managing growth takes both discipline and patience. “Lighting and camera angles are everything,” Slabic said. “When I moved into my apartment, the window was on the wrong side, so I had to completely change how I filmed my videos.” Behind the colorful paint strokes and viral videos lies a philosophy rooted in faith and authenticity. Salbic often credits her success to staying genuine and not chasing any trends just for views. Her followers tend to respond most when she posts real moments of her process. “I never thought I’d be at this point,” Slabic said. “It’s just a gift from the Lord. I don’t even want to take too much credit, because I’m not in control of the TikTok algorithm or why it went viral. I’m just thankful.” Her innovation, faith and consistency have opened doors to collaborations with art brands like DecoArt, which often sponsor giveaways when she hits follower milestones. To celebrate her most recent milestone, Slabic announced a giveaway featuring one of her signature handmade baskets, a gesture that reflects both her gratitude and the close-knit relationship she’s built with her followers. “I used to be scared no one would enter,” Slabic said. “Now every giveaway gets tons of engagement. It’s crazy.” What started as a small gesture of appreciation have turned into community-wide celebrations. Her followers often tag friends, share her posts and fill the comments with supportive messages, creating an atmosphere that feels more like a family than a fanbase Even with her growing platform, Slabic stays grounded about what got her started. “My favorite part is making banners for friends and family,” Slabic said. “It’s special to give them something handmade.” Those personal products remind her of why she even began in the first place with choosing creativity rooted in connection instead of competition. Although she plans to keep Signs by Alex running as long as she can, she’s also practical about the future. She hopes to continue growing her brand while exploring new ways to combine her communication degree with her creative skills through marketing, strategy or brand management. “I don’t want to bank on doing this forever,” Slabic said. “But having the platform I have, I could definitely do something else with it one day.”.
https://thebatt.com/life-arts/inside-alex-slabics-social-media-business-journey/
Tag Archives: entrepreneurs
Adriana Groza Celebrates Grand Opening of Princeton Art Gallery
GRAND OPENING: The Adriana Groza Art Gallery & Studio opens in the former Kopp’s Cycle building at 38 Spring Street on Tuesday, November 25 from 5: 25 to 7: 25 p. m. (Photo courtesy of Adriana Groza) Award winning artist Adriana Groza has announced the ribbon cutting and grand opening of the Adriana Groza Art Gallery & Studio, located at 38 Spring Street, on Tuesday, November 25, from 5: 25 to 7: 25 p. m. The event marks more than the unveiling of a new creative space it celebrates the 21st anniversary of Adriana and her husband’s arrival in the U. S., a day symbolizing a leap of faith, new beginnings, and the pursuit of dreams. “This is a day of many firsts,” said Groza. “It represents the moment I stepped onto new soil with hope in my heart and dreams in my spirit. To now open my own gallery in the heart of Princeton, surrounded by community and purpose, feels like full circle.” Groza is no stranger to the Princeton arts community. Since 2021, she has maintained an active working studio at Princeton Makes, the artist cooperative in the Princeton Shopping Center founded by Jim Levine. “Jim has been an instrumental mentor and supporter of my growth,” said Groza. “Princeton Makes gave me a home, a creative family, and the confidence to expand into this next chapter.” Housed in the Kopp’s Cycle building, the gallery opens at a time of cultural momentum in Princeton, coinciding with the upcoming reopening of the Princeton University Art Museum and the nation’s 250th anniversary in 2026. “At Princeton Property Partners, we believe art strengthens local economies and public life; that’s why we’re thrilled to welcome Adriana Groza to the historic Kopp’s Cycle building,” said Aubrey Haines, CEO of Princeton Property Partners and president of Experience Princeton. “Adriana’s presence will amplify cultural value, spur foot traffic, and deepen community engagement, aligning with our commitment to human-centered destinations where innovation and culture thrive.” Groza’s journey to this moment was shaped by years of community support and collaboration. Princeton Councilwoman Michele Pirone Lambros, an advocate for local business growth, has been a key supporter of Groza’s quest for a permanent home in town. “Adriana’s new gallery is a wonderful addition to Spring Street, showcasing her beautiful artwork that brightens the corner and brings new vibrancy to the entire downtown,” said Lambros. “Adriana’s connection with property owner Aubrey Haines began at an Experience Princeton meetup a perfect example of how networking events can help turn entrepreneurs’ dreams into reality through community support and collaboration,” added Lambros. Groza’s work, celebrated for its movement, emotion, and bold use of color, has been featured in regional, national, and international private and public collections. The new gallery will serve as both a showcase of her original paintings and a creative hub for workshops, exhibitions, and community engagement. Gallery Hours are Saturday and Sunday from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m., and weekdays by chance or appointment.
https://www.towntopics.com/2025/11/19/adriana-groza-celebrates-grand-opening-of-princeton-art-gallery/
Stormy Bidwill, former Sportsman’s Park president and co-owner of NFL’s St. Louis Cardinals, dies at 97
Starting in the 1960s and continuing through the mid-1990s, Stormy Bidwill’s profile as an influential sports owner was comparable to that of George Halas of the Chicago Bears and Arthur and Bill Wirtz of the Chicago Blackhawks.
From 1962 to 1972, Bidwill, who died Monday at age 97, was co-owner and general manager of the NFL’s St. Louis Cardinals. From 1967 through 1995, he was also president of the National Jockey Club, which conducted thoroughbred racing at Sportsman’s Park, the track his family co-owned.
Visitation will be held on Nov. 19 from 3-8 p.m. at Donnellan Family Funeral Home in Skokie. There will be a funeral Mass on Nov. 20 at 10 a.m. at Saints Faith, Hope and Charity in Winnetka, followed by a graveside service at 11:30 a.m. at Sacred Heart Cemetery in Northbrook.
At one point in the 1990s, Bidwill was the largest individual shareholder in Churchill Downs Inc., a member of the board of directors, and a close confidant of Warner L. Jones, the Kentucky thoroughbred breeder who, as chairman, oversaw a revitalization of the racetrack and the corporation’s evolution from a single track to a conglomerate.
Bidwill, whose given name was Charles Bidwill Jr., was also co-owner of four greyhound tracks in Florida during a time when dog racing was a popular pastime for the state’s year-round residents, snowbirds, and vacationers. All of these items in his diversified sports portfolio were inherited from his mother, the widow of Charles Bidwill Sr., one of America’s most colorful and charismatic sports owners and entrepreneurs.
When Charles Sr. died of bronchial pneumonia on April 19, 1947, at age 51, Stormy was an undergraduate student at Georgetown University and overnight became the heir apparent. “I don’t know what would have happened if my dad had lived,” he later told the Tribune’s Rick Kogan. “A choice was made for me.”
Although he was outgoing like his flamboyant father, Stormy made a conscious effort to stay out of the limelight throughout his life. Nevertheless, he was well-liked, respected, and admired more than any of his Chicago sports owner contemporaries.
Charles Bidwill Jr. was the antithesis of his nickname, which he acquired when he was a toddler. His uncle, State Sen. Arthur Bidwill, heard him causing a commotion and proclaimed, “This is the stormiest character I have ever seen.” His father burst out laughing and gave him the nickname.
“His nickname was misplaced. You hear ‘Stormy’ and you would think he was constantly creating an uproar or something,” said the late former Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar, an owner and breeder of thoroughbreds and standardbreds who knew Bidwill well. “Nothing could be further from the truth. I’ve met a lot of nice people in racing but nobody nicer than Stormy.”
“If ‘shrewd, tough and innovative’ are the first words used by associates and competitors to describe Stormy Bidwill, ‘fair, honest and devout’ are close behind,” Jeff Johnson wrote in The Blood Horse in 1999.
Born in Chicago on June 9, 1928, Bidwill graduated from St. Ignatius High School and went on to Georgetown, where he earned bachelor of science and law degrees. Although he passed the bar in both Washington, D.C., and Illinois, he never practiced law because he was preoccupied by his responsibilities in thoroughbred racing and pro football.
His father was one of the NFL’s pioneers and on more than one occasion loaned Halas money so that the Bears owner and coach could make payroll. In return, the elder Bidwill received $50,000 in Bears stock.
In 1933, Charles Bidwill Sr. got his own NFL team when he paid a Chicago dentist, Dr. David Jones, $50,000 to buy the Chicago Cardinals. His diversified sports ownership portfolio also included the Chicago American Giants — the most dominant team in the Negro baseball league from 1910 until the mid-1930s — the Chicago Bluebirds women’s professional softball team, Sportsman’s Park, the Florida greyhound tracks, and a string of racehorses.
In addition, Charles Sr. ran Hawthorne Race Course for the Chicago Businessmen’s Racing Association under a lease agreement from 1924-45, and then for the estate of Thomas Carey from 1946 until Bidwill’s death the following year.
Stormy’s mother, Violet, took over the Cardinals after the death of her husband and sold the $50,000 in Bears stock back to Halas. In 1949, she married St. Louis businessman Walter Wolfner, who was named managing director of the team two years later with Stormy as president and his brother Bill, who was three years younger, as vice president. However, the brothers had no true decision-making responsibilities despite their titles.
Under pressure from the Bears and the NFL, Wolfner was instrumental in moving the Cardinals to St. Louis in 1960.
Violet died on Jan. 29, 1962, in a physician’s office after a violent reaction to a penicillin shot. She left all of the sports holdings she’d inherited from her husband to Stormy and Bill, including an 82% interest in the Cardinals. Wolfner inherited nothing but five Oklahoma oil wells that generated $400 in monthly profits.
Wolfner filed a lawsuit claiming the brothers were illegally adopted as infants. This stunned Stormy and Bill, who were unaware they were adopted until they got the news in Probate Court. The judge ruled in favor of the Bidwills, and acting as the Cardinals president, Stormy also became the team’s general manager.
Co-ownership of the Cardinals proved to be a strain on the brothers’ relationship. In 1972, Stormy reluctantly sold his half of the team to Bill for a reported $6 million. Bill moved the Cardinals from St. Louis to Phoenix in 1988, and his son Michael took over operations in 2007.
After selling the Cardinals, Stormy focused on running Sportsman’s thoroughbred meeting and expanding the Churchill Downs Inc. holdings he’d inherited. The Louisville track’s president, Matt Winn, couldn’t pay the bill owed for betting tickets printed by a business owned by Charles Bidwill Sr., which led to Bidwill’s growing involvement.
In the years since Stormy left the Cardinals hierarchy, the value of an NFL franchise skyrocketed while racing profits dwindled. This decline was due to massive expansion of casino gambling and the growth of mainstream sports, which enlarged their audience dramatically through television contracts.
“I can’t look back,” Stormy said later when asked about the financial ramifications of the split. “His idea of how to run the team and mine were different. The leaving wasn’t easy for either of us. Now, I call him on his birthday and he calls me on mine.”
With Stormy at the reins, Sportsman’s was superbly maintained and supremely functional. While he concentrated on the thoroughbred meeting, the track’s co-owner, the late Billy Johnston — whose father was another of the track’s founding fathers — directed the harness meeting and made it a smashing success.
Without prodding from the Illinois Racing Board, Stormy renovated the Sportsman’s stable area, a 15-year, $4 million project that entailed building fireproof brick barns with second-floor dormitories for backstretch workers. In 1990, he renovated the grandstand at a cost of $1 million, and in 1992, he spent $3.6 million to resurface the racing strip and expand it from five-eighths of a mile to seven-eighths, giving Sportsman’s a 1,436-foot homestretch, the longest in North America.
Unlike the late Dick Duchossois, the former Arlington International Racecourse owner and chairman who relentlessly sought to drive rival track owners out of business, Bidwill took an ecumenical approach. As he put it, “We are all in the same lifeboat. What’s good for Arlington is good for us (at Sportsman’s).”
The track fell on hard times after Stormy’s eldest son and successor as president, Charles “C3” Bidwill III, discontinued harness racing. In 2000, C3 converted the facility into a $200 million combination thoroughbred/auto racing venue known as Sportsman’s Park/Chicagoland Motor Speedway, increasing seating capacity from 12,000 to 67,000.
However, after three years, C3’s collective venture with Championship Auto Racing Team (CART) magnate Chip Ganassi and Sportsman’s chief operating officer Ed Duffy proved to be an aesthetic and financial failure, leaving the National Jockey Club with an estimated $70,000 debt load.
In an attempt to continue thoroughbred racing, in 2003 the National Jockey Club shut down Sportsman’s and partnered with next-door neighbor Hawthorne to create Hawthorne National LLC, racing there for 99 years under a lease arrangement. The Carey family and Bidwill racing groups remained separate entities.
But that attempt was thwarted in 2006 when Duchossois Industries bought a reported $20 million National Jockey Club note with Harris Bank and foreclosed, putting it out of business. By then, Stormy was no longer involved in the decision-making process, and his sports holdings were limited to his Churchill stock and the greyhound tracks he co-owned with Johnston. These greyhound tracks have since been converted into poker rooms following Florida’s ban on dog racing.
His role at Churchill became that of a director emeritus.
Without fanfare in 2006, Stormy and his since-deceased wife of 67 years established the Charles W. and Patricia Bidwill Foundation. According to their daughter Patti, who serves as the foundation’s chairman, it has a two-fold purpose: providing quality education for young men and women who otherwise wouldn’t have access to it, and providing educational support to children with physical and mental special needs.
Stormy and Patricia raised their family in Winnetka and Kenilworth before moving to Northfield, where he resided at the time of his death.
In addition to Charles III and Patti, he is survived by another son, Brian, and daughters Mary Christine and Shauna (Danny) Valenzuela. Stormy was preceded in death by his wife Patricia in 2016 and brother Bill in 2019.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/07/stormy-bidwill-dies-chicago-sports-owner/
