Play video<\/span>\n <\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\nHow did you get into poetry?<\/h2>\n
It started off more as rap, during my senior year of high school. It was kind of a surprise \u2014 like, \u201cOh, I\u2019m really good at this.\u201d And it was creative and fun and just kind of tickled my brain.<\/p>\n
When I started school at Valencia, there was an open mic type show they had through the African American Cultural Society. That was my first real performance, with a microphone and a formal audience. I don\u2019t remember what piece I performed, but I do remember the reaction: People were going nuts. And I thought, \u201cThis is it. I\u2019m staying right here.\u201d<\/p>\n
What inspired you to start your own open mic night?<\/h2>\n
The open mic scene was very homogenous in my opinion, like the same people and the same groups depending on what open mic you went to in what part of town. So, in 2006 I went to the National Poetry Slam, and it was very much mixed. That\u2019s when I thought, we have to capture that same spirit here in Orlando.<\/p>\n
In 2006, some of my poetry friends and I were invited to speak to youth offenders at the [Orange County] 33rd Street jail. We ended up going back [weekly and] created a 12-week curriculum for a poetry and life skills course. Seeing the impact that had, in addition to my exposure at nationals, was the primary spark for starting an open mic night. I was developing an awareness that poetry isn\u2019t just entertainment. It can be much more.<\/p>\n
What do you hope to accomplish in your role as poet laureate?<\/h2>\n
I think part of what I want to accomplish as poet laureate is helping define what it is. I\u2019d say about 80% of people who hear that term don\u2019t know what it means. And I\u2019m interested in amplifying the awareness, the presence, the importance, the imagination of what the role of poetry can be in a city. Whatever I do \u2026 I want to create something that\u2019s ongoing, something the next poet laureate can build on.<\/p>\n
We want to create an energy in the city that says poetry is important, and it does more than we think it does at its face value. I\u2019m also invested in developing more infrastructure for other artists to be heard, to get paid. I never had that, and I found a way. I want to build a pathway that other Orlando artists can follow.<\/p>\n
What would you say is poetry\u2019s role in a city?<\/h2>\n
A few years into hosting the open mic, I started to get a sense of the social impact that was happening beyond the poetry. People were dealing with heartbreak and addiction and tragedy \u2026 and there\u2019s an audience listening. It\u2019s like a legitimate form of free therapy. Poetry is entertaining and inspiring, but the strength of relationships and networks that are built because of it, I think that\u2019s big.<\/p>\n
I also think it\u2019s helpful to be in the space of imagining what our future can be like. And one way our imagination is provoked and tuned into our own identity and the identity of our community is through poetry. Collectively, we start to put these pieces together and develop concrete ideas when we enter this seemingly abstract space. So, I think stimulating the imagination of a community and building social capital are two major benefits of poetry.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":22719,"template":"","categories":[999],"tags":[1579,287,1452],"class_list":["post-22631","story","type-story","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-alumknights","tag-college-of-arts-and-humanity","tag-college-of-sciences","tag-ucf-alumni","issues-1575","issues-spring-2022"],"yoast_head":"\n
Orlando's Second Poet Laureate on Growing the Local Arts Community<\/title>\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\t\n\t\n\t\n\n\n\n\t\n