BPS Recap For Wednesday, January 21th & January 28th, 2026

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Open Mic Highlights

01/21/26

• Tyrone’s short and wild ode to flying toilet paper that took a lot of detours within one minuted

• Apologies to Artemis if this does not describe their poem appropriately, but I have written down “gay sex set to the sound of protests” in my notes about their work

• Lyn’s love letter to Voyager I, and anti-love letter to large language models (“You got out just in time, Voyager”)

• Isaiah’s written-during-the-open-mic poem about the three wolves inside you: the f**k wolf, the marry wolf, and the kill wolf.

• “I confuse time for pain” – Aparna

• Shenanigans arose when the name “Enigma” was called up to the open mic and mysteriously didn’t show up….until 5 or 6 poets later when they suddenly appeared to read! A very apt moniker.

01/28/26

• River’s nostalgia filled poem about swimming in their home lake, and how they trained to swim all seven miles of it

• “I have been replaced by the harmony of dawn” – Charlie R

• First timer Rachael C’s excellent Tea Party poem, which breathed new life and fresh ideas into a popular consent metaphor

• Edie’s response to the ICE shootings in Minneapolis (“Fascist stormtroopers” / “Carnage is our bigest domestic product”) and Kaitie D’s “Home is where the bodies are buried”

• First timer Jimmy’s “Having a snow with you” that made living somewhere with a horrible windchill sound practically romantic

• Bobby Crawfrod’s “The New Me” – “There were parts of me that died before but this was the first time I had to kill it myself”

• Myles’ “Scrolling through 224 video squares during the ICE information aoom call”

• I don’t usually comment on what I (Michael F Gill) do on the open mic, but this week I spoke in remembrance of Ron Goba, the original BPS doorperson, who died this past at the age of 89. We will be having a Ron Goba tribute night this coming April!

Feature

On January 21st, we had a feature from Ally Ang! It was a sort of homecoming in that Ally read their first poem on stage at the Cantab many years ago. Ally read us a ton of poems with very little banter slow them down, so we got to hear work from both new and old manuscripts. Highlights include “A vegetarian goes to H Mart (to finger meats)”, “More Americans think they’ve seen a ghost than a trans person”, and a couple of amazing litanies (one where each line begun with “Trans day of ______”). There was also new work that skillfully tied in those annoying “Click here to verify you are human” CAPTCHAS with the idea of feeling noticed and seen in the world. Thank you Ally!

This past Wednesday on January 28th we had an open poetry slam! It was a shorter 6 person affair, but that didn’t stop our finalists Edie and Amy from delivering incredible and polished work! Shoutout to Durane West for kicking off a section of poems revolving around Boston history and lore, as Will S and Edie followed up with Boston poems of their own. At the end of the night, Amy was the winner and took home $75. There’s only one open slam left before our big 2026 team selection slams!

Coming Up This Wednesday

This week we have a feature from local and Cantab/BPS favorite JR Mahung and an early bird workshop by Stevie Subrizi! Workshop at 6:30, doors at 7:15, show starts at 8:00, and feature goes on at 10.

JR Mahung (She/They) is a Garifuna poet from Chicago. She now lives in Boston, MA with her cat, Frank Ocean.

Stevie Subrizi’s “One Prolonged Un-Understanding” workshop info:

What separates prose poems from micro-fiction, flash memoir, and other shortform literary prose? For that matter, what—besides a lack of line breaks—separates them from other poems? Here’s one answer: perhaps, to quote Dean Young’s poem “Lives of the Mind” on the topic of art itself, a prose poem is uniquely suited to serve as “one prolonged un-understanding / just as dawn is day’s un-understanding of the night.” From news articles to work emails, product descriptions to history books, prose delivers so much of our “understood” reality. Looking at prose poems by Victoria Chang, Eve Ewing, and Zachary Schomburg, we will un-understand our real-life subjects by pulling them into the dreamlike realm of poem-logic while using the familiar frame of the workaday paragraph, forming a mirror-universe portrait that can reveal more about our world than may be seen through a literal, realist lens.

See you soon!

– MFG 🚪

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BPS Recap For Wednesday, January 14th, 2026

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Open Mic Highlights

• Mary’s Heated Rivalry poem and “I have no one I can give my power to who can also protect it”

• Jennifer’s “Confession of An Emotional Intelligent Avoidant” (great title / relatable!)

• Ember wasn’t supposed to be in town but got to say goodbye for a record third time (lucky for us!) and Bailey gave us a fiery new piece after poet Richard Siken, involving an “autism-friendly desert fork”

• Kaitie D’s “Eulogy to The Daughters” (after Ben Tolkin) that sprung from a litany beginning with “I have a daughter in ______”

• Abbie’s ouroboros farewell poem as they return to Ireland, and Carson’s “Queer Inquiry To Friendship In Movies”

• An incredible staff/smoking section that had Aparna’s moving piece about a Cambridge meeting discussing a police murder, Amy’s “All poets need a poem titled ‘Inheritance'” after Catherine Weiss, Kai’s dive into romance novels, and Myles’ absolutely iconic “Defend Allston (from ICE)” poem that showcases the neighborhood in all of its glory.

Feature

We had an open qualifying poetry slam this week! First-time slammers Abigail and Winston both made it to 2nd round with solid work: Abby detailing the last words of a relationship, and Winston responding to Aparna’s classic “I Imagine My Mother On Her Deathbed And”. Our final two was a surprise–Keaton signed up on a whim but delivered strong work on their drag name (“Male Hysteria”), late night ChatGPT conversations, and their well-known poem about a Boston redditor looking for people to compete with. Even more of a surprise was getting to hear three poems from no-longer-in-Boston-but-still-in-New England Bobby Crawford, who read the humorous “The Summer All The Girlfriends Disappeared”, a solitary tale of how “The Internet Works But Maybe It Shouldn’t”, and a nearly 4 minute epic about continuing to work at the same bar where one of their late co-workers used to work, and keeping up their traditions and recipes. Keaton was the winner of the slam, but a great time was had by all!

Coming Up This Wednesday

This week we have a feature from across the country: Ally Ang!

Bio: Ally Ang is a gaysian poet & editor based in Seattle, WA. Their work has appeared in The Rumpus, Muzzle Magazine, ANMLY, and elsewhere. Ang is a 2023 National Endowment for the Arts fellow and MacDowell fellow. Their debut poetry collection, Let the Moon Wobble, is now out from Alice James Books. Find them at allysonang.com or on Twitter and Instagram @TheOceanIsGay.

See you soon!

– MFG 🚪

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BPS Recap For Wednesday, December 30th, 2025 & January 7th, 2026

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Open Mic Highlights

12/30/25

• Our regular Worcester contingent had Bailey rattling off several sonnets in 3 minutes, and the actual/bonus last time on the mic from Ember before they move out of town!

• “My father’s anger is an expensive palette / with more silence than I can afford / he does not speak my language” – Hallie C

• Sophie’s ode to the red dress that saved their life, and Edie C’s “If life is an escape room…”

• The way famous literary authors seem to constantly visit Nick Roberts’ poems. You are never more than stanza away from a Kafka or John Donne cameo!

• John’s Rick Astley-themed Golden Shovel and Bob’s S poem about stolen lobsters

01/07/26

• We had an early bird music-themed workshop from Flight or Visibility, who in exchange for making everyone sing during the workshop, read a very sound-heavy poem with the repeating phrase “check in scales disclipine rinse repeat”

• Birthday poet Keaton wrote about choosing to drop out of The 27 club and the upshot of abstinence

• The welcome return of Left Eye to the mic for the first time in a year, who brought us a breakup aftermath poem with the specter of raw violence and the key line “No one asks me if I’m safe”

• Ed’s writhing examination of a man who said “‘So, my wife just had her first baby…”

• Will S. leading the charge of anti-ICE poems, and very raw confessional work from newcomer Diana

• Brynna’s turn hosting brough us some delightful “2026 goals” from her young students, as well as starting up a lively debate on the merits of indoor vs outdoor recess

• Myles’ examination of “Knowing someone in the biblical sense” with the cutting thought that “I never felt like I knew myself or someone else more through sex”

Feature

On December 30th, we had our newest slam innovation, The Wild Card Slam! In this format, all poems were 2 minutes long and everyone gets to read at least twice. If you’ve ever been wronged by the judges in the first round, this is the slam for you to get redemption in the second chance/wild card round! In fact, Edie C survived the wild card round to win the night and the $75! On January 7th, we welcomed back Erica Fabri, who first featured on the Cantab stage back in 2010. Erica read from her new book, Morphology, and mixed the personal, the political, rats, snakes, and a whole lot of hyperlocal NYC vibes to an engaging effect. She even took an unexpected Q&A session with the audience mid-feature as a palette cleanser! Thank you Erica.

Coming Up This Wednesday

This week we will have our normal extended open mic and one of the last few open poetry slams before team selection starts! If you have 3 poems that are 3 minutes or less, you can compete for the chance to win $75! The top 2 slammers will also qualify for the 2026 Boston Poetry Slam team selection.

See you soon!

– MFG 🚪

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Winter Holiday Shows!

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Happy holidays!

Since both Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve are on Wednesdays this year, we will 🚫NOT🚫 be having shows on Wednesday, December 24 and Wednesday December 31. But we still have 2 holidays shows coming up!

#1: On Tuesday, December 30th, we are hosting a 🃏WILD CARD SLAM🃏at the Cantab Lounge. Sign up is first-come first-serve, and there will be a $75 cash prize for the winner! The top two poets in this slam will also qualify to try out for the 2026 slam team. Doors at 7 pm, open mic at 8, slam around 10 pm!

Also known as the “second-chance slam,” here is the format for the wild card slam:

  • Four round slam, with all poems 2 minutes or less, and everyone gets to read at least twice.
  • Round 1 – 8 poets (top 4 move to Round 2, bottom 4 go to wild card round)
  • Wild Card round – 4 poets (top 2 move to Round 2)
  • Round 2 – 6 poets (top 3 move to Round 3)
  • Round 3 – 3 poets

#2:Then, on New Year’s Day, we will be hosting a 📝Write-a-thon📝!

  • Fill Out the jotform survey here to sign up!
  • The 2026 Boston Poetry Slam Write-a-thon is a new event where members of the local community come together both virtually and/or in person to create all formats of poetry, writing, and art together. 
  • Time: January 1, 2026 from 3pm-7pm: Meet on Zoom or in person (address and further details to be emailed after RSVP sign up is submitted.)
  • Programming includes writing prompts, workshops, collaborative writing projects, tarot readings, and a private blog (known as the 365 blog) where work created during the Write-a-thon can be posted.
  • You don’t have to attend the virtual/in person programming to participate! There’s also an option to just post your work on the private 365 blog, which will be available all day long. Future updates on our full schedule of activities to be posted soon!

Hope to see you at one of these events! Regular Wednesday shows will resume January 7th, 2026.

– MFG 🚪

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BPS Recap For Wednesday, December 17th, 2025

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Open Mic Highlights

• It’s the end of year, which brought a share of open mic regulars leaving (good luck in Denver, Ember!) and returning (welcome back from Ireland, Abbie!) to the stage, as well as surprise visits from Sophie (first time on the mic in 11 years!) and the always engaging Ben Tolkin (who told us about a wild stranger-than-fiction encounter with a stranger right off a bridge in Iceland).

• Kaitie D writing historically/metaphorically morse code with lots of echoes and repetition

• Harold’s first original on the mic went deep into their recovery from abuse using Jungian therapy

• Ed’s “Let it Snow” parody that focused on the ending phrase of “very frightful” to darkly comedic effect. Also seasonal: Meredith’s wrenching seasonal affective disorder poem that put us directly uner the darkness of 4:30 PM in December.

• John Lee made sure we didn’t end 2025 without hearing a funy yet existential diarrhea poem. Thank you?

•The smoking section feature lively work from Kai about Princess Zelda is non-binary, March’s Penn flashback to a moment when anger, jellyfish, and their mother’s sea change all collided, and Jarvis’ crowd-pleasing list of lurid and candid letters to people he has interacted with on Grindr.

Feature

We had an OPEN POETRY SLAM this week! We had a trio of first-timers in Edye, Liza, and Jack, as well as strong work from TJ Jones who read a poem revealed to him a dream. The welcome return of Meredith L to the slam stage brought forth a new headaches-and-horses poem, and a reprise of their relateable “What do I do with all this spite” piece. The final round came down to still-hungry slam veterans Will Leonard and Aparna Paul! Will Leonard came with newly-polished dynamic performances of some old classics (“I wake up with all the answes / I’m hungry” pulsed with fresh energy) and Aparna dropped some new work on us, one about being hatecrimed in Brookline, and another meta poem about how a slam poems “needs to have stakes.” Both of them qualified for the 2026 team selection and were equally beloved by the judges, but for the record Aparna squeaked out the win by one-tenth of a point!

– MFG 🚪

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BPS Recap For Wednesday, December 10th, 2025

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Open Mic Highlights

• Tyrone’s delightful memorized (or are they improvised?) miniature pieces continue! No one else could shout out “Enjoy your daily suffering!” with such perverse glee.

• Wholesome vibes: Brandon not onl read a poem to their best friend who was in the audience, but also gave them a copy of the poem in a plaque! And Greg M wrote another heartmelting poem to his wife of over 40 years.

• Harold’s surprising cover of Earth, Wind, Fire and Em’s response to Bailey’s “I am queer” poem

• River’s sonnet “Ars Poetica of aTrans Body” and poem detailing sex…by turtles!

• The return of Alison Truj to the mic, Sue Savoy’s telling “What my poems are about”, and Will S’s “New York Jets / New Jersey Mall Experience” rounded off a particularly great open mic in front of a packed basement.

Feature

Our feature Jenny Mulberg gave us a short but memorable feature featuring both new and old work. Early set highlights include “Grape Jelly” (“No one wanted to marry me on ring pop day”) and a tribute to radical/experimental artist Carolee Schneemann, specifically the time she pulled a scroll out of her crotch. We also heard a series of charming and self-described “Bitch” poems, with titles like “Bitch interrupts a Wedding” and “Bitch under a Tree Eating Wendys” that came with accompanying buttons that Jenny was giving out for free. Another section of her feature came from her book, The Court of No Record, which details the process of her abuser appealing the case against him, and turns the complete transcript of the court sessions into cathartic poetry. Thank you Jenny!

Coming Up This Wednesday

This week we will have our normal extended open mic and an open poetry slam! If you have 3 poems that are 3 minutes or less, you can compete for the chance to win $75! The top 2 slammers will also qualify for the 2026 Boston Poetry Slam team selection.

See you soon!

– MFG 🚪

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BPS Recap For Wednesday, December 3rd, 2025

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Open Mic Highlights

• “I grew up / the world begged for more observation” – Alex Kist reflecting on watching television and coming of age

•Newcomer Erica’s startling poem where they wrote a letter to their former self, after having lost a good amount of their personal memories after an accident

• Liza’s poem on ripped jeans and how they are “just like me”

• “Writing about anger is making me angry” – Sue Savoy

• March’s “body horror” poem inspired by all the graffiti and text written in the Cantab bathroom

• David and Ryan returning to the mic for the first time in years, and Tim’s homage to the person who helped them come out

Feature

Our feature was the very intriguing Sarah Kersey who read both new work and from their book Residence Time. “Residence Time” is a term for how long an object stays suspended in water (for example sugar can last as little as 2 seconds in water, where salt can last up to 55 million years in the ocean), which led to a striking opening poem “The People From The Middle Passage Are Still Suspended In The Water.” Another big theme was Sarah’s journey as a self-described “recovering cult member”, and what it’s like to leave a religion behind and find your own life and sexuality (she facetiously called these poems “The Tinder Chronicles.”) Her wry description of the mindset of depression (“Shit is just reliably terrible”) resonated with a lot of members in the audience, but she did end with a hopeful poem about the man who helped her when she was stranded on the side of the road with no gas in her motorcycle. Thank you Sarah!

Coming Up This Wednesday

This week we have a feature from the new Editor-in-Chief of Ploughshares at Emerson College – Jenny Molberg!

Jenny Molberg is the author of three collections of poetry, most recently The Court of No Record (LSU Press, 2023), a Los Angeles Times Book Prize finalist. Her fourth book, The Medium, is forthcoming from LSU Press in 2027. Her poems and essays have recently appeared in The Adroit Journal, The American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, The Missouri Review, Oprah Quarterly, and elsewhere. Her work has received support from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, the Sewanee Writers’ Conference, the Vermont Studio Center, and others. She is Professor of Writing, Literature, and Publishing and Editor-in-Chief of Ploughshares at Emerson College.

See you soon!

– MFG 🚪

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BPS Recap For Wednesday, November 19th & 26th, 2025

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Michael: We are jamming two recaps into one during this Thanksgiving holiday season!

Open Mic Highlights 11/19

• Kamran surprised his wife (who was in the audience) by covering “Wedding Song” by Bob Dylan. (“Straight men take notes!” – Myles, who was hosting after Kamran left the stage)

• “The Large Hadron Collider has no date tonight…neither does God” – Tyrone

• “The bouncer at the bar tells me I am smaller each time he sees me” – from Jennifer Martinez’s showstopping new body image/perception poem

• “Masculinity peaks in the sword you never draw” – Frank M

• “Writing is lying and editing is making it true” – Bobby Crawford

• Will S’s wild vision of riding the 4:30 bus to Saugus and meeting Jesus, and then accompanying Jesus as he trashes a Trump supporters’ house

• “My love language is…language” – Jenna B on how difficult it is to put things in words sometimes

• Amy’s “What if I died with a Diva cup in”

Open Mic Recap 11/26

Myles: T’was the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, and all through the basement poetry rang and food abounded! Our community donated two bags of non-perishable food to the Harvard Square Community Fridge and gathered for a very sweet extended open mic. We got to hear the full, uncut version of Bailey Magpie’s therapist poem, regular TJ and host Myles danced on thin ice with some prose, and new regular Tyrone Walden coined the phrase “getting Waldenized” after another rhythmic stand-up-inspired off-the-dome piece. The most interesting part of the night, though, was how many new faces we saw on what is usually a slow night of predominantly regulars. We hope this wasn’t just a holiday season tryst and that these new readers come back soon!

Feature 11/19

Michael: Local Boston poetry legend Cole Rodriguez was our feature on 11/19! Cole performed a powerful set of almost all-memorized poems, with incredible flow and charisma that you may have not noticed the subtle and clever rhymes in nearly every line (until they performed a piece entitled “This poem will not rhyme”!) In honor of Patricia Smith, Cole performed an incredible cover of Patricia’s “Medusa”, and ended the night with a great sexy/naughty piece, despite being a little bit embarrassed that some of their students were in the audience! A great time was had by all!

Coming Up This Wednesday

We will have a feature from Sarah Kersey and an early bird 6:30 workshop by Shelby Coe!

Workshop Description: Looking to design or adapt workshops for youth spaces? In this reflective workshop, we will reflect on our past & present learning experiences and discuss creating community and safe space for young poets. Participants will leave with strategies to create inclusive, engaging programming for poets of all ages!

Feature Bio: Sarah Kersey is a poet and x-ray technologist. Originally from New Jersey, she has called Boston home since 2023. Her debut collection Residence Time was published last October with Newfound. Fellow poet Taneum Bambrick said of their collection: “Residence Time, begins in origin and sinks into realities that operate like dreams. This speaker remarks on the sonic beauty of the word ‘diaspora,’ asking ‘how many iambs did it take to cross the sea?’ Kersey’s forms snap apart, square, and seep—each poem scrambles excitedly, expansive like a midnight conversation between beloveds hidden under a sheet. I will turn to this poet, always, for how they trace the tangles between past and present, for how they obsess over the question of what permanence means.”In 2025, it was named a finalist for the Eric Hoffer Book Award–Medal Provocateur. Their work has appeared in The Rumpus, SWWIM, Hobart, The Account Magazine, Columbia Journal, and elsewhere. Sarah is a Tin House Workshop alum.

Workshopper Bio: Shelby Coe is a spoken word artist, educator and proud alum of the Disney College Program. She is a two-time recipient of the Transcendent Coaches Award at MassPoetry’s Write Here, Write Now, Speak Loud Youth Poetry Festival out of Boston. When she is not writing or performing, you can usually find her working with her award winning youth slam team out of Lowell, Massachusetts or learning Taylor Swift songs on the ukelele. Follow her on @shelbycoepoet on Instagram for updates!

See you soon!

– MFG 🚪

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BPS Recap For Wednesday, November 12th, 2025

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Note: Tonight’s show (11/19) will start a little later than usual (8:15-8:30), due to the secret music show happening upstairs at the Cantab! While we wait to start, we plan on having a little writing workshop based on lines of poetry gathered by our staff!

Open Mic Highlights

• Bailey’s list/will poem based on the line “To my ____, I leave these things” which also included a rare paradiddle reference (shout out to drummers!)

• Mary’s “What do Oedipus and Taylor Swift Have In Common?” that revolved around Choice vs Fate vs Luck

• Ash covering former Cantabber torin a. greathouse and Kamran covering Persian poet Hafiz

• John’s ridiculously wry “I wish people would stop thinking I am flirting because I am not except when I am”

• “My name is built by braking, K-a-i-t-i-e should keep it’s I’s so it can always see itself” – Kaitie D

• Natalie’s poem analyzing and bemoaning how much time they’ve spend thinking and writing about their breakup, including the actual measured time and statistics

• Amy’s epic and cathartic “I wrote a short poem” that had a lot of empty spaces that were slowly and then urgently filled up as the poem went on, and has us all looking forward to next week’s “I wrote a long poem” (which should be the length of a haiku)

Feature

On short notice we had a surprise fill-in feature from Cantab slam team / slam coach veteran ZEKE RUSSELL! Although Zeke has deep pockets of poems, he performed mostly new work from his upcoming manuscript, and touched upon themes that have run through his work: recovery, sobriety, elegies for the departed, self portraits, and a love of baseball and wrestling. We heard odes to late Cantab poets Jeff Taylor and Omoizele “Oz” Okoawo, as well Red Sox pitcher Tim Wakefield, plus a very “Masshole” flavored take on the people in Lowell who helped Zeke get clean. He ended up on a lighter note, reading poems about his chosen wedding song and the joys of filling-in to distribute lunch to those in need. Thanks for the last minute feature Zeke!

Coming Up This Wednesday

As mentioned above, tonight’s show will start a little later than usual, but we will have local legend Cole Rodriguez featuring for us!

Cole Rodriguez is an internationally recognized spoken word artist, originating from Boston, MA. As a six-year participant in the National Poetry Slam, Cole has competed against the top-ranked poets in the United States. As a mother, teacher, artist and friend, Cole has used her poetic work to create community, inspire activism and speak truth to power.

Passionate about youth development, Cole works with universities, high schools and in therapeutic settings to facilitate spaces wherein poetry can be de-constructed, celebrated and created. Bridging the gap between theory and practice, she has worked with institutions including Harvard University, Berklee College of Music, Boston College, Salem State University, Brandeis University and Bermuda College, as well as a host of alternative and public schools, to incorporate activism and poetic voice into the classroom.

As a performance poet, she has captured audience’s attention as an acclaimed slam winner at Cambridge’s Lizard Lounge, Roxbury’s House Slam and Manhattan’s Nuyorican Café. This lover of rhyme continues to perform throughout the US and abroad. Cole is an avid music appreciator, a Celtics fan, and a beast in the kitchen.

See you soon!

– MFG 🚪

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BPS Recap For Wednesday, November 5th, 2025

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Open Mic Highlights

• In our new “staff sacrifice” that now begins our open mic, Amy spontaneously wrote a golden shovel about a comment in Myles opening spiel regarding “America’s next great top talent”

• River’s “Poem In Which I Remove Myself”

• Jake’s wild piece about how chewing is a form of late-stage capitalism, and how you should eat strawberries without chewing them for the good of mankind

• Kamran read “3 minutes of prose” about the different collective nouns around birds that absolutely delighted the crowd and was, in fact, a poem!

• Fred-Yaah returns the mic after a nearly 20 year absence, with a poem about how he can sense black people walking with him when he’s confronted by racism

•John Lee’s very wry haiku, Edie’s riff on Bailey reoccurring “Queer” poem, and great imagery from first timer Adia

Feature

This week we had another open qualifier poetry slam! Props to open mic-ers Auden, Will, and Jamie who all slammed for the first time! While we had solid work from Kyle and Logan, Kelsey and Brynna stormed their way to the final round, with Brynna taking the win!

Coming Up This Wednesday

Our scheduled feature Aparna Paul has fallen ill, so their feature will be rescheduled. Filling in will be local legend/slam coach/Cantab veteran ZEKE RUSSELL.

Zeke Russell is a poet and housing advocate. He grew up in Central Maine surrounded by artists, lumberjacks and outlaws. He is clean and sober and lives in Boston with his spouse Milo. His debut poetry collection, Wintered Over, is available from Game Over Books. His work has appeared in Wyvern Lit, Drunk In A Midnight Choir, Freezeray Poetry, Maps For Teeth and on Button Poetry online.

– MFG 🚪

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