Cantab Recap For Wednesday, April 10th, 2024

What a Wednesday Cantab! It’s not every week where a birthday and a feature are celebrated at the same time, but that was the case with our feature tonight, Greg Smith! The open mic was excellent, highlights included Arielle Gray’s “I don’t know how to end conversations” piece, and powerful poems from Meaghan Ford and Sara H about domestic violence that really shook the room. Special shout out to the express lane this week, where the 1-minute poems from Ember, Kat Gunther, Finn, Cho, and Mckendy were sneakily one of the best back-to-back poem sequences of the night.

The ✏️Line of the Wednesday✏️ is from Youssef, with: “What is your religion? / What is the name of your mother and the work of your father?”

Our feature and birthday-celebrator Greg Smith gave us an energetic, exuberant, echoing feature, diving into stories of their past and even their future. Greg makes you feel things I can guarantee you’ve never felt before, and the image of a Phoenix rising from a bathroom sink is forever burned in my mind. 

This week, we have a feature from Lynne Schmidt! Lynne Schmidt is the queer, neurodivergent grandchild of a Holocaust survivor. Their latest chapbook, The Unaccounted for Circles of Hell, will be published with Stanchion in January 2024, and Dying Dog Poems will be published later in 2024. Their chapbook SexyTime was a winner of the 2021 The Poetry Question Chapbook Contest, and Dead Dog Poems was the 2020 New Women’s Voices Contest winner. In 2012 they started the project, AbortionChat, which aims to lessen the stigma around abortion. When given the choice, Lynne prefers her pack of dogs and one cat to humans.

See you then!

– Amy ✈️

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Cantab Recap For Wednesday, April 3rd, 2024

Hi Cantab! Now that Team Selection is over, the hype, sold out nights, and crazy energy has finally come to an en- oh… wait… I’m being told by my producers that last Wednesday was in fact just as hype, sold out, and crazy energy as last month!

One of the most notable aspects of the night was when Cameron (aka “Professor Philip Plumberly”) recited a satiric poem in his excellent mostly-British character, and while I cannot describe the raucous experience of the poem, I can say the line “her excellent boobies” was said. Newcomer Donovan also blew us away with his poem about his “body electric.” Perhaps the highlight of the night was new regular Lys McGuire performing a completely improvised poem based on the word “apples” shouted from the back of the room. It was so good I think half the audience didn’t realize it was improv until halfway through the poem!

The ✏️Line of the Wednesday✏️ goes to Siraj, with “I am just a human who eats too much joy”

Before the open mic, we had an evocative workshop led by our own staff member and incredible host, Nayeli. The workshop was incredibly generative and featured analysis of two bodies of work (from sources as diverse as Gertrude Stein and Earl Sweatshirt), and a whole fruit tableau, spotlit on the stage.

After the open mic, the beloved veteran Cantabber Brian S. Ellis provided us with a jaw-droppingly fantastic feature. We all got the privilege of existing within the world Brian’s words create. There were tales of the perils of copywriting, Occam’s razor, and honestly what it means to live. There was not one, but two standing ovations, a truly one-of-a-kind feature. Thank you Brian!! You can also re-watch Brian’s feature on our instagram here.

Psst! This month is National Poetry Writing Month, so be sure to interact with the “Take a Prompt, Leave a Prompt” cup we have set up at the front table, and get writing!

This week, it’s not just a feature, it’s a BOOK RELEASE SHOW! Gregory Smith (They/Them) is drinking wine right now. They can solve a 7×7 Rubik’s cube in only (1) penalty overtime work shift. You can find them sharing kandi bracelets with Metalheads or backswinging at a warehouse rave. They have been serving on staff at New Hampshire’s longest-running poetry slam and open mic series, Slam Free Or Die in Manchester, New Hampshire, since 2018. They also were chosen as Slam Free Or Die’s Indie Slam Champion and IWPS representative (in abstentia) in 2018. Their poetry has appeared in Bullshit Lit, The People’s Book Volume 2, Verum Literary Journal, Rockview Reader, Rectangles, and on NHPR.com. Their debut full-length collection, Profligate Angel, is forthcoming from Game Over Books. They’re an Aries and therefore are here to spit fire and truth, no matter the cost.

See you then!

– Amy ✈️

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Cantab Recap For Wednesday, March 27th, 2024

Michael: Hey poetry fans! Have you recovered yet from our biggest Wednesday show of the past two years? Last week’s open mic had the return of old friends Gemma Cooper-Novack and Raechel Segal, a “secret agent trans” group piece from Meaghan Ford, Otto Vock, and Alex Kist, as well as great work from first-timers Ronnie G, Kayla S, Orion, and Kai B. But let’s get straight into the team selection finals slam recap! Our show curator Myles Taylor will take it from here.

Myles: This slam was so intense that I’ve decided to write the recap as a play-by-play, in homage to the tradition of live-tweeting or live-facebooking slams as they go. Each of these poets fought their asses off and I want to memorialize this slam in as much detail as I can.

Your sacs were Kat Anderson and Keaton Howl, two regular powerhouses you may remember from team preliminaries. Kat brought us an open mic favorite about their (lack of) oral history, and Keaton gave us a moving tribute to a past slam mentor. Their scores were 24.1 and 25.9 respectively, establishing our judges with a fairly Cantab-standard range of mid 7’s to low 9’s. 

Mary Schwabenland kicked us off with the emotional rollercoaster “Breaking Up With God,” and Logan Lopez followed with a gorgeous new poem about speaking Spanish to their friend’s new baby. Both poems scored in the same range as the sacs. Then, in the 3rd slot, Brynna Boyd came out with a new poem about a hole in her heart that blew the room open completely, rocketing the scores to a 28.7. Jennifer Martinez followed with her classic polished slam piece with its iconic opening, “Big Breasted Beauty,” hitting a .5 time penalty but garnering the only 10.0 of the night, establishing herself as a poet to contend with. Katya Zinn’s piece about sweeping broken glass and Kaitie Dilán’s poem about family, in the 5th and 6th slots, were .2 away from each other (25.9 and 26.1), while Sara H’s anger poem and Amy Argentar’s brand new piece about being a rebel scored an identical 24.9 in the 8th and 9th. In between those sets, past team member Aparna Paul set herself apart with Man Lies, scoring a 27.2 despite a .5 time penalty.

By the time the dust cleared after round one, Brynna Boyd and Aparna Paul had set themselves ahead of the pack with Jennifer Martinez in a good position behind them. The last two slots, however, were anyone’s game, and the intensity grew. Host Nayeli Wessel-Meadows performed a sorbet poem for us to reset the room and the slam resumed. Brynna started the round with “Louisiana Crab Shack,” a laugh-and-cry nuanced piece that scored high enough to mathematically guarantee her a spot on the team (yes, already!!)). Amy Argentar followed with an ode to Jeopardy (26.9) and Kaitie Dilán read a new piece involving trauma and cole slaw (26.1). Winning round two was Aparna Paul’s I Dream My Mother On Her Deathbed (which you can officially watch on Button Poetry! Go on, do it) with a 28.0, mathing her onto the team as well. Jennifer Martinez followed with a softer piece about depression and collected a 26.6, putting her in a leading position but not scoring high enough to guarantee her a slot. Round two was halfway over and the last three team spots could be snagged by anybody.

Logan’s poem about moving apartments and queer family warmed hearts and shed tears, getting a 27.1. Sara H’s ode to her cat Oreo, the he/him lesbian, was adored by the audience and resulted in both a 26.6 and probably my favorite photo from the slam (a good old fashioned muscle flex). At this point in the slam, Jennifer Martinez became officially mathed onto the team behind Brynna and Aparna.

In the penultimate slot, Mary Schwabenland – remember, from the 1st round? – impressed the judges with their ode to the Longfellow Bridge, raising scores to a 27.6. This bumped Mary’s final score above Jennifer’s, mathing Mary onto the team (from the 1!!!!!). This meant there was one slot left and one poet left – Kaitie Dilán was, at this time, positioned for 5th. Katya Zinn closed out the slam with some new shit – from their journal! – about the movements of worms, among other things. Katya got a 26.4, just enough to bump her into the 5th team slot by literally one tenth of a point. This was maybe one of the wildest things I’ve seen in slam and I am frankly still reeling. 

The final standings are as follows:

  1. Brynna Boyd – 56.1
  2. Aparna Paul – 55.2
  3. Mary Schwabenland – 53.4
  4. Jennifer Martinez – 53.1
  5. Katya Zinn – 52.3
  6. Kaitie Dilán – 52.2
  7. (TIE) Logan Lopez – 51.8
  8. (TIE) Amy Argentar – 51.8
  9. Sara Hill – 51.5

Let it be known that these poets fought their way through an open slam season and preliminary slam to get onto this list, and so to be at the bottom of this slam is still to be one of the season’s winners. All 9 of these poets deserve praise and congratulations for their valiant efforts in this stupid, chance-fueled bar game. Thank you to everyone who came out, everyone who judged, and everyone who supported a slammer, as well as to my bout staff Zeke Russell and Michael F. Gill. Finally, a huge thanks to everyone who has ever slammed at the Cantab and helped create this ridiculous tradition. 

Get ready to catch this team representing us at the NorthBeast Regional, July 20-21 in Cambridge, MA! And come to the Cantab this week for a feature from all-time-Cantab-favorite from the past, Brian S Ellis!

-Myles ✨

Cantab Recap For Wednesday, March 20th, 2024

Amy: Happy first Wednesday of Spring Cantab! We had a lovely show last week. Georgia came back after not just years, but decades, to perform a poem. Second-timer Dave read some absolutely killer wordplay on the perils of dating apps. Shout out to first-timer Rin who unofficially wins the also-unofficial “getting the crowd going” award for the night, with a wild mix of poetry and edgy stand-up.

And now, a haiku to pass it off to Michael: after the open / seventeen bucks on the line / a short but sweet slam!

Michael: Thanks Amy! Our monthly haiku slam series continued this week, and it was such a sensation that it deserved a larger mention in this week’s recap. Haiku slammers have learned that you need to go for the jugular in the first round, which usually means some form of comedy and/or sex related haiku. Jacq Roderick, March Penn, and Sarah King were all rewarded for this in the first round, but when Decker and Amy both went for the outrageous in the same round, the audience had a more difficult time picking a clear winner. Seeing this as an opportunity for a palette cleanser, finalists Jacq and Sarah shifted their haiku to be more personal, with Jacq coming out victorious in the end!

Amy: Thanks Michael! Now, moving to the astounding off-book feature we had from the great Amanda Shea! Her emotive pieces on love, loss, and how to find the most genuine parts of yourself and society, left the audience dazzled. This hard-working poet deserves all your praises. 

This week! We have … drumroll please…. The TEAM SELECTION FINALS!! 9 poets will compete in a 2-round slam that is guaranteed to be the best adrenaline-thumping, voice-hoarsing, competitive, and exciting slam of the season!! You do NOT want to miss this! The top 5 slammers will be henceforth our 2024 Boston Poetry Slam Team, with the 6th being the alternate. The competing poets are as follows:

  • Sara Hill
  • Mary Schwabenland
  • Logan Lopez
  • Jennifer Martinez
  • Kaitie Dilán
  • Amy Argentar
  • Katya Zinn
  • Aparna Paul
  • Brynna Boyd

Also, psst…. It’s not just the slam that’s this week, it’s our TWO-YEAR ANNIVERSARY of our grand re-opening! Thank you to everyone, new or veteran, that has supported and been a part of this great community.

See you then!

– Amy ✈️

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Cantab Recap For Wednesday, March 13th, 2024

Amy: What a week Cantab! I’ll just get straight into it. The open mic was full, sold out, and electric with excitement! The night started off with Cameron performing two pieces, one of which being a completely memorized reciting of “Jabberwocky” by Lewis Carroll, which turned into an unintentional group piece, with several audience members joining in a poetry chorus of “Beware the Jabberwock,” and “Callooh! Callay!”

Other highlights include Briana from Masspoetry performing a passionate piece, Kai’s return after a brief hiatus with a green thumb poem about what it means to have roots, and a great debut from newcomer Casey! I would also like to note that time seems to stop in the Cantab basement, proven once again by Nayeli thinking St. Patrick’s Day was a week before it actually is (and no one correcting her). 

The line of the Wednesday is “This rot has carried / a stone garden heart around” by Kai Wallin

Now, I’ll pass it to Myles with the recap of the second preliminary slam that took place!

Myles: Hey folks – this is Myles reporting from Preliminary 2. I’m gonna go ahead and say this was an absolute bloodbath. Amy Argentar gave us two poems new to our stage but polished like she’d done them for years. Aparna Paul and Jennifer Martinez brought out edited and memorized iterations from Cantab slams past. Mary Schwabenland and Keaton Howl gave us spirited performances of their tried-and-true work, and Kat and March read us a gorgeous and intimate mix of newer and older pieces. But as we know in slam, someone has to come out on top. The poets moving on to finals are: 

  1. (TIE) Aparna Paul – 55.6
  2. (TIE) Amy Argentar – 55.6 
  3. Jennifer Martinez – 55.0
  4. Mary Schwabenland – 53.0 

The poets not moving on but who were essential to the quality of this show are Keaton Howl, March Penn, and Kat Anderson. Keaton and March (another tie!) will be invited back to sacrifice or sorbet at our finals on March 27th. Big thanks to our judges, four of which were brand new to our venue (!) and one of which was a wonderful regular and representative from the staff at Mass Poetry, Briana Cohen. 

All of this means that finals on March 27th will feature the following poets:

  • Sara Hill
  • Mary Schwabenland
  • Logan Lopez
  • Jennifer Martinez
  • Kaitie Dilán
  • Amy Argentar
  • Katya Zinn
  • Aparna Paul
  • Brynna Boyd

Whew! What a list! You’ll be there, right?! Good! Because you won’t want to miss this one. Back to you, Amy!

Amy: Thanks Myles! Now, we have two Wednesdays until our Team Selection finals, but this week is definitely one you do not want to miss! Amanda Shea is a renowned spoken word and multidisciplinary artist, educator, performer, artivist, publicist, and mother. She’s hosted BAMSFest and countless poetry events; she facilitates youth workshops for spoken word poetry, visual arts, and public speaking; she is a publicist for hip hop artist Brandie Blaze; she has managed and supported countless other artists in Boston. In 2021, she was named among WBUR The ARTery’s 25 artists of color transforming the cultural landscape. Shea co-founded and curated six iterations of Activating ARTivism, a community festival to amplify POC through art, activism, and resistance. Importantly, it has raised awareness and provided support for local nonprofits like Mission Safe, The New England Innocence Project, Trans Resistance MA, The Simple Good (Chicago), and the LDB Peace Institute.

In December 2022, Shea won the inaugural category for Spoken Word Artist of the Year at the Boston Music Awards. Shea was featured in January on GBH News for the “Embrace; Boston” unveiling ceremony. Shea is the curator of GBH’s “Outspoken Saturdays” a platform for poets across New England, where 8 poets perform each month while recording live at the Copley Library, NewsCafe. Her work can be found in the Museum of Fine Arts, The Boston Globe, TEDX, TEDXRoxbury, Netflix, Prime Video, BBC News, and much more. Shea will release her first book, “Pieces of Shea” in the Winter of 2024. Amanda’s work examines her personal life experiences, social justice issues, and healing through trauma utilizing art as the tool.

We’ll also have another haiku slam this Wednesday with a $17 prize! See you then!

– Amy ✈️

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Cantab Recap For Wednesday, March 6th, 2024

Hey Cantab!

I hope we are all feeling well-rested after daylight savings shot us an hour into the future! This past Wednesday our open mic was filled with high-energy and meaningful work. Kaitie D. packed their poem with fierce imagery and dissonant dissociation. Liz, all the way from New Zealand, gave an astonishing poem on office/corporate culture. We even saw a unique, unironic love poem from our regularly-ironic Cameron V. Finally, there were not one but TWO clown poems, including a persona poem from Myles on Pagliacci the Clown. Speaking of persona poems, we want to give a big thank you to Otto Vock, who hosted an incredibly generative persona poem workshop before the open mic!

The ✏️Line of the Wednesday✏️ this week goes to new regular Ilse Ruizvisfocri, with “I let my luck follow its destiny”

I’m bringing back Weekly Shenanigans! The Weekly Shenanigans this week was when the mic decided to use its power of free speech and stop working (possibly as a revolt against Big Poetry™️?). However, this did not stop Nayeli from literally wrangling the mic cord and making sure her voice was heard.

Our feature, Partridge Boswell, brought Irish folk and his guitar to the stage, serenading us with a series of acoustic songs and a few poems. We always appreciate when someone brings their unique flare to the Cantab, and Partridge’s cadence and passion for the arts was clear and had the audience mesmerized!

This week! We have our SECOND TEAM PRELIMINARY SLAM! Come witness the second half of the Boston Poetry Slam’s 2024 team selection preliminaries! The following poets will compete across 2 rounds:

• SAC: Meredith Lakis
• Amy Argentar
• Aparna Paul
• March Penn
• Mary Schwabenland
• Kat Anderson
• Jennifer Martinez
• Keaton Howl

The top slammers will make it to Team Selection Finals on March 27th. Come support your friends and if you don’t know anyone in the slam, volunteer to judge!

See you then!

– Amy ✈️

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Cantab Recap For Wednesday, February 28th, 2024

Michael: What’s up Cantabbers! It was one of our biggest slams of the year this past Wednesday, and there was a buzz in the air even after the night was over. If you had trouble coming down from the high of the open mic and slam this past Wednesday night, you were not alone!

On the open mic, we had charming litanies from March Penn and Cameron V, meditative work from Skylar Sweet Cheeks, and high (HIGH!) theatrics from Jack Chasse, who has reworked high cadence rhyming into a mutant beast of their own. Shenanigans includes Katie and Danielle reading both of their poems on stage together, despite their protestations that it was NOT a group piece. The highlight of the open was Maya Detwiller’s sweet non-linear ode to their ornithologist boyfriend, which had the audience SWOONING to the point that a number of subsequent open mic-ers prefaced their poems by saying A) I wish I was an ornithologist or B) I wish I was dating an ornithologist. Thank you Maya!

We now go to our local correspondent (and show curator) Myles Taylor, who was taking feverish notes during the slam!

[Insert “Breaking News” music here as the spotlight raises on Myles]

Myles: Hey folks! This is Myles reporting in with notes from Team Preliminaries – Part One! It was clear from the start that our slammers are not messing around this year. Poets Katya Zinn and Eddy Martinez brought us explosive performances of their tried-and-true memorized work, & Kelsey Kessler, Sara H, and Brynna Boyd worked some past slam favorites into the mix. Kaitie D took poems from the open mic and brought them to us refined, edited, and locked into her body. Two poets brought work entirely new to our slams – huge props for such a bold move to Kris Cho and (despite having several polished poems from last year) Logan Lopez! The standings for the poets moving on are as follows:

  1. Brynna Boyd – 56.2
  2. Katya Zinn – 55.3
  3. Kaitie Dilán – 53.5
  4. Logan Lopez – 53.1
  5. Sara Hill – 52.2

Huge rounds of virtual applause for Kris Cho, Eddy Martinez, and Kelsey Kessler, who held their own throughout the night but will not be advancing. Kris Cho, having missed the 5th slot by only two tenths of a point (!) will be one of our sacrifices for Team Selection Finals on March 27th. Big thanks to our judges for making the night happen: Siraj, Ari, Rina, Chelsea, and celebrity judge Queen Sheba.

Tune in for Prelims Part Two on March 13th, where the second half of qualified poets will be competing in another two-round slam of epic proportions. Back to you in the studio, Michael!

[Spotlight fades on Myles and rises on Michael in the BPS newsroom]

Michael: Thanks Myles! This week, in between the slam mayhem, we have a feature from Partridge Boswell! Author of the Grolier Poetry Prize-winning collection Some Far Country, Partridge Boswell is co-founder of Bookstock Literary Festival and teaches at Vallum Society for Education in Arts & Letters in Montreal. He lives with his family in Vermont and troubadours widely with the poetry/music group Los Lorcas, whose debut release Last Night in America is available on Thunder Ridge Records. His Saguaro Poetry Prize-winning chapbook Not Yet a Jedi is also now a thing.

See you there!

– MFG 🚪

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2024 Slam Season Update

Hey folks!

This is Myles, dropping in with an update about our 2024 slam season! Qualifiers for this season have completed, and team selection is underway to appoint our 2024 Boston Poetry Slam team. If you are looking for last Wednesday’s recap by Amy, it’s right below this post!

Last year’s slam season had significantly less buy-in, and I scheduled monthly qualifying slams throughout this season to meet what I thought was a low demand. I was blown away this year by the number of poets getting invested in slam, many of which are brand new to the sport. I say this to make it clear that not every poet who rocked the house with their work throughout our slam season managed to snag one of these few coveted spots. At the start of the 2024-2025 slam season, I will be continuing monthly qualifier slams, and then increasing their number to every other Wednesday as we get closer to team selection. Hopefully this will result in a 2025 team selection as robust and exciting as the selections of yore, which involved two preliminaries, a semis, and a finals!

The final list of competitors have been divided up between two preliminary nights. February 28th and March 13th will be our two preliminary showdowns, with 7-8 poets competing across 2 rounds in each.

February 28th

• SAC: Youssef
• Sara Hill
• Kaitie Dilán
• Eddy Martinez
• Brynna Boyd
• Kelsey Kessler
• Katya Zinn
• Logan Lopez
• Kris Cho

March 13th

• SAC: Meredith Lakis
• Amy Argentar
• Aparna Paul
• March Penn
• Mary Schwabenland
• Kat Anderson
• Jennifer Martinez
• Keaton Howl

Huge congratulations to every person on this list for fighting through a strongly competitive pool of poets. Anyone who has attended a Boston Poetry Slam open mic or slam in the last few months knows what a talented line-up this is! I have no idea what will happen and I am frankly a little terrified by the pure power contained in this list!!!

The top five from the 02/28 preliminary and the top four from the 03/13 preliminary will advance to yet another 9-person, 2-round slam: team selections finals on March 27th. That means each poet in team selection will need four polished poems to make it to the end. Expect this to be one of the best poetry shows you have ever seen, and block your calendar off now to get there early for admission

The top 5 from finals will constitute our team, which will represent us at NorthBeast, VOX POP, and other various regionals, competitions, and gigs as they may arise. 

A quick note: you are not required to be on this team if you want to compete at the NorthBeast Regional! The regional will have the opportunity for pick-up teams this year, which is 4 or 5 poets who sign up to compete as an independent group. 

Wait, so what is the deal with this team, then? Well, the Boston Poetry Slam has annually selected a team of poets representative of our venue since 1991. It is a tradition we take very seriously, and the poets who make our team are immortalized in our archives, joining the ranks of legendary poets like Patricia Smith, Shira Erlichman, Rachel McKibbens, Simone Beaubien, Omoizele Okoawo, and … me lol! (I got real lucky in 2017.) This team is coached, offered gigs and opportunities through the venue, and covered for any costs associated with competition. 

The main point of the team was once to send it to the National Poetry Slam, which is exactly what it sounds like: the largest team-based poetry slam competition in the English-speaking world, where every registered slam in America and some from abroad would send a representative team to compete in one city for four days. Poetry Slam, Inc. and the National Poetry Slam went under in 2018, and the pandemic firmly sealed its fate. However, regionals have been popping up across the country in the last couple years, and a goal of the Boston Poetry Slam is to eventually be able to fly the team to competitions other than our local regionals to introduce our poets to more of the world of performance poetry. For now, though, the team is mostly ceremonial, and gets the honor of representing us locally. But keep coming, keep slamming, and maybe one day you’ll get the opportunity to go somewhere you’ve never been, to meet people you’ve never met, and perform for people who couldn’t have heard your work otherwise. Only time can tell. 

-Myles ✨

Cantab Recap For Wednesday, February 21th, 2024

Happy Cantab Wednesday everyone! We are back at it again with a packed room (sold out 20 minutes before we even started!) and some great talent on the open mic. Kaitie Dilán really tested our endurance with an incredible FitnessGram PACER Test-inspired poem, Arielle (congrats on your engagement!) did her twist on a love poem (of course, written at the bar), and new regular Lys Maguire hit us with a banger and clarified how she was “Alicia with no Keys.” We also had a sizeable handful of first timers, such as Ruby and The Daft Hatter. 

The ✏️Line of the Wednesday✏️ goes to Eddy Martinez, with “Cuddling is harder than it looks. In fact, everything is difficult.

After our astounding open mic and smoking section, we got to hear from our feature, Hailey Tran! Hailey’s work was cutting, and it led you to the thesis of her poem like a hand guiding you through a dark forest. She touched upon her namesake, sibling relationships, and being the oldest child. This former Youth Poetry Slam champion really took our breath away! Check out her full feature on our Instagram.

This week! Get ready for a night packed with nerves, highwire performances, whiteboards, and of course, poetry, because we have reached PRELIMINARY #1 for our Boston Poetry Slam Team Selection Series! Come see the following competitors compete in a 2-round slam for a chance to advance to the finals on 3/27!

  • SAC: Youssef
  • Sara Hill
  • Kaitie Dilán
  • Eddy Martinez
  • Brynna Boyd
  • Kelsey Kessler
  • Katya Zinn
  • Logan Lopez
  • Kris Cho

Come support your friends and if you don’t know anyone in the slam, volunteer to judge!

See you then!

– Amy ✈️

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Cantab Recap For Wednesday, February 14th, 2024

Amy: Hi Cantab! I hope you all had a lovely week (and long weekend) – we sure did! Love was in the air during our special Valentine’s Day show. The mic list was full (like our hearts) and the Odeo – the Ode Rodeo – shot an arrow of incredible poetry through the audience. On the open mic, Kim shared about wanting (or maybe… not wanting) to quit her job, Daniel gave a heartfelt performance on not taking life for granted, and Brynna thoroughly educated us about their local Texas gas station, Bucky’s. Jarvis and Logan also performed standout pieces.

Michael: Hi Amy! Sorry to interrupt your recap, but Skylar Sweet Cheeks just texted me and told me one of your poem lines needs to be featured this week, and I agree! Therefore, without further ado, the ✏️Line of the Wednesday✏️ this week is “How much talent it takes to be blissful for just a moment” by Amy Argentar.

Ok now back to your regularly scheduled recap!

Amy: Thanks! <3 Towards the end of the open mic, we had a Dirty Haiku slam hosted by Michael F. Gill (who, if you didn’t know, also serves as editor for these recaps). We had newcomer Lysette blow us all away, staff member Kat with a crazy one-liner, and a series of three job-related haiku by Logan that took him to the final round! However, Logan was defeated by Siraj, who performed his infamous Taco Bell haiku (after possibly some peer pressure from the audience).

And now, the Odeo! We had a whopping 12 competitors go head-to-head for three rounds, performing odes to nearly anything you could think of! Highlights include the duo K&K (Kai Wallin and Kaitie Dilán) performed an Odesonnepuntal (Ode/Sonnet/Contrapuntal) telling us all to be gay and do crimes. We had great poems by recent feature Mica Rich and staff host Nayeli, while open mic regular Otto Vock tugged at our hearts with their personal experience being an educator, and then proceeded to made it all the way to the final round in their first-time slamming! At the end of it all, love was in the air, but so was $50 dollars and bragging rights; new standout regular Mary S claimed the big Odeo win!!! Thank you once again to our hosts, judges, and all slammers for a fabulous show!

Quick note: thank you to everyone who participated in our Blind Date with a Book fundraiser! We were able to raise so much for the continued development of the Boston Poetry Slam, and we hope you enjoy your book!

This week! We have Hailey Tran as our feature! Hailey is a Boston based and Lowell raised dreamer. Hailey is a queer Asian American Latina spoken word and performance poet, who believes in the transformative power of storytelling and art. Currently, they are a high school history teacher in Roxbury who is passionate about helping students understand their ancestral memories. They are an educator who uses the creative process to interrogate structural and interpersonal violence, to better understand racial, gendered, and queer identities, and connect with their community at large.

COMMUNITY NOTE: The current COVID surge is one of the highest throughout the pandemic and we want to keep our community accessible and safe. We STRONGLY ENCOURAGE the community to bring a mask to the show for the next few weeks and to keep it on when not drinking or performing.

– Amy ✈️

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