I’m pleased to have Regan Burke back as a guest blogger today. She’s been a member of many of my classes over the years (Regan is featured in “Writing Out Loud”) and maintains her own blog, Backstory Essays, and she’s been published in The Christian Science Monitor and a variety of other publications.
It’s the bomb
by Regan Burke
This past Friday morning Beth, Whitney the Seeing Eye dog, and I met at one of Columbia College’s Michigan Avenue buildings in Chicago to volunteer for this year’s Louder Than A Bomb poetry slam. In the elevator up to check in, DJ Ca$hera gave us a hearty hello. She’s Louder Than A Bomb’s famous house DJ, working the entire six-week competition.
Louder Than A Bomb (LTAB) is Chicago’s annual youth poetry slam. Sponsored by Young Chicago Authors, the slam hosts over 1,000 youth poets in tournament-style bouts, all open to the public. Students representing Chicago area high schools stand on stage performing their own original poems to an audience of spoken word coaches, teachers, peers and strangers.
LTAB requires an army of volunteers for the events to run smoothly. Beth and I could have been check-in/greeters, merchandise sellers, timekeepers, social media ambassadors or judges. Judges! What could be more perfect for Beth, who teaches writing by listening to student recitations in her five weekly classes, than to be a judge for a spoken word competition? When I offered to be at her side for the first round, she agreed to sign up.
So there we were Friday morning, seated ten feet from the stage in the front row with lap-size white boards and markers. This was one of the first rounds of the five-week competition, so before the bout began, the MC briefed us on how to judge. “Write numbers on the board from 7-10. Use decimals,” he said. “A ten means the student is so good you’d pay their college tuition.” Translation: don’t give tens out too easily.
I sat next to Beth thinking I’d help her write on the board. But guess what? Beth didn’t need help. I was at the ready with the eraser, though, to clean Beth’s white board for each new poet.
On stage, DJ Ca$hera fired out bouncy hip-hop tunes. A “sacrificial” poet came first to get the ball rolling, make the room competition-ready, and give the judges a practice round. Then one after the other, poets from four different high schools kicked up onto the stage, introducing themselves by giving their names and the name of their poem before starting their reading. Many poets read from their phones, beating out words that particularized a slice of their lives: hard-bitten parents, bullies, sisters getting raped, and “fear of falling off a mountain of success.” One girl pushed through tears throwing down bars about her mother’s drinking, “her cheeks deflated like old birthday balloons.”
DJ Ca$hera turntabled tunes that artfully reflected the poets’ words. The MC shouted out the numbers we wrote on our boards, and his playful comebacks to some of our votes encouraged the students in the audience to join in. Anytime a poet got a score of 9.0 or lower, the audience chided our judgment by yelling “listen to the poem!!”
Next we judged the entire team of poets from each school. Each group performed one poem together, succinct, snappy and sophisticated.
In the end all of the young poets — twenty or so –hopped onto the stage to hear the winners. While waiting for the decision, they cheered and hugged and jammed to DJ Ca$hera’s rousing wind-up.
Whitney, unharnessed, made friends with the high schoolers sitting behind us, squirreling her way under Beth’s chair, encouraging them to rub her ears. We had to dig her out from under there when it was time to leave.
On the way out we met Eric Coval, the Maine East spoken word coach. Eric’s brother, Kevin Coval, Chicago’s unofficial poet laureate, created LTAB 19 years ago.
It was only 1:00 in the afternoon when we breezed back onto Michigan Avenue, fully entertained and far too stimulated. Now we’re checking the online schedule to see if we can find a time slot to come back and judge again. #LTAB is still looking for volunteers, no experience necessary, The slam continues through March 17, shifts are available weekdays and weekends, and you can sign up here.
Tickets still available for the final rounds of Louder Than A Bomb at Chicago’s Auditorium Theater on Sunday, March 17, 2019. Look for me there.
Hey Beth, great article, fun to read! I think I may go to the finale. However the links at the end for volunteering and getting tickets to the finale don’t work. I got a Page Not Found message.
Very cool!
Yes, so cool to have Regan write this great guest post. And what fun to have her at my side while we were judging! Maggy, ouch, so sorry the link to volunteer didn’t work. I’m about to check my html coding, but in the meantime, the link is: http://youngchicagoauthors.volunteerlocal.com/volunteer/
Maggy, I think it’s fixed now –I had too many double quotation marks “”Dang.””
Thank you so, so so much for pointing this out, and promise me you’ll keep letting me know about broken links in the future.
Promise?
Okay.
I must say I am too old and old-fashioned (and an old English teacher to boot) to get enthusiastic about the idea of poetry slams (What
would T.S. Eliot say?
But it does sound like fun.
Beth thanks for the link. I am considering volunteering for one of the events, it might be fun. I like the idea of poetry slams. Sometimes I find a little goes a long way. But I’m for anything that gets kids to develop their verbal and mental skills.
Confession: after two hours listening to their poems, I was kind of exhausted. A good exhaustion, though,. Getting outside and walking down Michigan Ave. for a bit with Regan afterwards refreshed us both, and after bidding her goodbye and going my own way with Whitney I smiled all the way home. The energy and determination of the kids in the slam was inspiring. I do hope you’ll sign up, Maggy.
I just read it somewhere that poetry and memoir writing tend to go hand in hand for many, and it’s true for me. May be Beth and Regan are onto something here 🙂
Interesting! Tell me more….?
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