This week, we'll dive into the best uses for our different social media platforms.
Tune in as we talk about the editing process, how to be professionally petty and employed at the same damn time.
On Episode 1 of Season 3, Alex and I dive into what we've been up to when we were on hiatus. We're also getting into the latest Insecure season with a character by character breakdown. Like, share, repost, review, all uh that.
First of all, welcome back!!! Today, Alex and I give our two cents on the vegan life and why it's so common among the artist communities we're in. We somehow end up asking "Does anything on the menu have a mother? Or eyelashes" and concluding that alcohol will take you out before chicken. You don't want to miss this reunion!
This week, we marvel at the magic that is Erin C Poetry. We talk black history. We poetically snatch edges. Erin recited 1.5 poems, and Alex and I get our entire lives. You don't want to miss it.
This week, we chat it up with comedian, sketch artist, mom, aging like Benjamin Benjamin Button, Ms. Corean Canty. We'e watering prosceniums, walking through the different types of improv poetry, and shedding light on the intricacies of the art form. Like, share, repost, subscribe, rate, review, follow!
Tune in to this week's episode where your favorite Black Girl Joy evangelists drop some knowledge about how to hit the artistic reset button.
You can't expand what doesn't exist. Join in on our discussion around creating your own unique artistic platforms.
This week, we dive into poetry, acting, and creating your own lane within it all.
This week, we sit down with Dallas Poetry Slam's Rage Almighty and Wayne Henry to discuss the evolution of slam poetry in Dallas, TX and how both of them are rippin' up these stages locally and internationally. There is Memphis Bleek shade. There are abstract metaphors, and there's Rage asking to be fed like a baby bird. Nothing you're doing right now is more entertaining than that.
This week, we touch on why two artists don't mesh well over a dope ass beat, which types of artistic relationships work and which are doomed to the infinite realm of suck-ass-dom as Zack Linly would say. Of course, we've got the songs that have been the sources of our joy this week, so check em out, share the posts, like the posts, recruit another 10 followers, whatever you do well.
This week, we dive into the joys of hosting spoken word open mics, writing, performing, and stepping outside of our comfort zones. There's also a lot of laughing, because Amena (or Amen with an A) is a blessing and the epitome of black joy.
So we finally got to sit down with the man behind the voice, hip-hop extraordinaire, the BASS in the group voice, Mr. Adan Bean! Tune in as we talk hip-hop, poetry, and the intersectionality of it all with Java Monkey Slam Team member, rapper, son, Morehouse Man, the list goes on and on like the Erykah Badu song. You don't want to miss it!
Just like that Mystikal song, we just out here bouncin back. Not sure if we can still claim Mystikal, but it was a good song before he got those charges. Any way, tune in as we talk failure, setbacks, and the bounce back in poetry and our artistry. Artist highlights: Leikeli47 and the Black Beetles. We'll explain. Like, subscribe, share, repost, all that good stuff.
We're off hiatus and have the hype man's hype man joining us for a conversation about being the jack of all trades out here in these artistic spaces. Tune in, like, share, repost, all uh dat.
We are not gon do y'all like the Carmichael Show did Black America. We WILL be back in a few weeks. But check out the Season finale as we give you a sneak peak of what next season will include and how to keep up with us during the interim
We're joined by Homegrown Poetry's very own Ryan J and Nate Mask, two slam poets in the Atlanta community who self identify as honest. Before their tour "nobody likes us but we're here anyway" kicks off, they found time to talk to us about investing in the production, making it an LLC, and share with us how they keep their hair so damn glorious.
Everybody eats, b! You've heard the phrase before. Let's break down what it means for artists to spread the knowledge to encourage growth for others. Ashlee Haze returns to the Famous Enough podcast to talk through her philosophy behind the motto. We touch on art as business, our dream superpowers, and what's coming up in the poetry world. Tune in, like, share, rate and review, and most importantly, y'all be great.