Thursday, May 31, 2007

Fancy Online Video of National Poets...Including ME!



Famecast.com is a site that features up and coming talent. They're having a contest right now...AND there's a 10,000 prize for the winner. More importantly, there's a lot of major, national spoken word talent to check out for FREE.

You can listen to, contact, and vote for:

Tony Jackson
Big Poppa E
Paulie Lipman
Genevieve Van Cleve
Taylor Mahli
Minister of Sin
Corbet Dean
Buddy Wakefield
Mike Whelan
Xenogia Spoken Word Collective
Da'Shade Moonbeam (Jeff is his poet name)

I'm sure I've missed a few names that are familiar to you. This is a really fun and validating contest for our art form.

Here's what you gotta do to check out your favorite poet:

copy past this link in your url:
http://www.famecast.com/contest/stage.php?stage_id=15&round_id=73

OR (if the link doesn't work.)
go to www.famecast.com click on stages go to stage 9

You'll have to create an account in order to vote and comment.

The Austin Poetry Slam Needs You!


Austin Poetry Slam

Hey Slam Poetry Lovers, genvc (Genevieve Van Cleve) here!

The National Poetry Slam is coming to Austin, Texas again this year. 400 poets will descend on our town like a bunch of fire breathing, beret-wearing dragons.

We can’t put on this show without you. Lend us your ears and give us your cash. We need you.

We’re looking for your help. -A small donation. 5 bucks. One fancy beer, the “M” in your next “MOM” tattoo. 5 bucks. We need you!

We’re counting not only on your donation, but for you to tell your friends, who’ll tell their friends, and so on and so on… It will look like this:



We’re passing the hat. Donations can be made via the Austin Slam website.

Let’s do this thing together.

Yours truly,

The Austin Slam Family

Cindy Sheehan Steps Aside


Good Riddance Attention Whore- The title of Cindy Sheehan's letter.

Cindy Sheehan has stepped aside. She's returning to her private life. I'm glad. She'd become tired, weird, had come to believe her own press.

Cindy Sheehan was not a hero. She was a normal person in extra-ordinary circumstances. She did what no one in the public arena was willing to do two years ago. She called the President's bluff. She shared with us the real human cost of war. She lost her son, as have so many others during this horrible, ill-advised war. She also reminded us that the tragedy and violence of war is not limited to our allies. She mourned for the people of Iraq. The women, children, and men who've lost their lives in this conflict.

She was not an easy woman to listen to. Her message was bigger and more complex than most Americans, of either political stripe, could digest.

We love our celebrities. We love to watch them flourish as much as we love to watch them fall apart. Cindy Sheehan fit the bill. She was singled out to the exclusion of other Gold Star Families and peace activists, and she didn't say, "No".

In her letter, Cindy thanked no one. Her exit was not strategic or gracious. Then again, I guess that's not her job. She revealed herself us. In the end, that's not enough to sustain a movement.

Ann Wright was a steadfast supporter of Cindy. A career Army officer that resigned her commission over this war. She is a leader, not a celebrity. I hope that Ann Wright takes up the mantle that Cindy has set aside. I hope that everyone accepts that foreign policy and the peace movement are more important than one woman's journey through the meat grinder of fame.

On a personal note, I got married at Camp Casey. Cindy Sheehan was my "maid of honor". Peter and I felt that our marriage was not only a political statement, but a hopeful act-an act of love in the face of great ignorance and misunderstanding. Love trumps everything. Love heals.



I hope Cindy finds some healing, and that we can let her go. There is so much work to be done. Cindy opened our hearts and minds to the reality of this war. That's enough to ask of one citizen.