Anti-Slam: Bad Poetry Slam Photos and Recap (NSFW)
Truth Serum's "Anti-Slam: Bad Poetry Slam"
Sunday, August 12 at Milky Way Lounge & Lanes, Jamaica Plain
All photos by Aliza Shapiro
I had the honor of being one
of a trio of judges at Truth Serum’s "Anti-Slam: Bad Poetry Slam," at the Milky
Way Sunday evening (which, not coincidentally, coincided with the National
Poetry Slam Competition), and it left me wondering if bad poetry is more
enjoyable than good poetry - or at least more entertaining. Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Galway Kinnell
once said, "Nobody would write poetry if the world seemed perfect," and that
seems even truer for bad poetry which, as Sunday’s Bad Poets proved,
spawns from broken teenage relationships, overly wordy musings about nature,
passionate emotions related to mundane objects, and disgust with cultural
tendencies to over-technologize everything. The irony was palpable - aren’t those the basis of
many so-called good poems? - and creativity was abundant with the contestants
diverse approaches to the concept. Third-place winner Lindsay Crudele bravely
and unabashedly shared works from a tattered high-school journal, which she
noted has actual tear stains; Mike Perlman, of 123 Party! fame,
carried his typewriter onstage and finished writing a horrible-yet-hilarious, verbose
nature poem (someone alert Pitchfork); a hot redhead in a satin dress named Johnny Blazes (the
second-place winner) blanked on the words to her poem, and subsequently
stripped down to read the words written all over her body; the Cumbaya Slam
Collective praised the vagina for being "sweet as sugar, pink as a rose,
wise as Buddha," and an inventive, spiky-haired "Stud
McMuffin" pitched a new Apple product called "iPoem." In
the mean time, Aliza Shapiro, the woman behind Truth Serum, held everything
together, calling breaks to get drinks from the bar, and offered herself as the
sacrificial lamb, by reading at the start of each of the four rounds. As
said, there was no shortage of eclectic entertainment, but the hands-down
winner of the evening was Phoenix freelancer Chris
Braiotta, whose "Tryptic Plus One About the Stages of a Man's
Life," which included a poem declaring that "The boys of today will
make terrible lovers," and an ode to pantyhose ("You've ruined finger
fucking, but you're required at the office") were so awesomely bad that
they were kinda good - which seemed like the whole point.