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By Wammo AUGUST 17, 1998: The National Poetry Slam is basically a giant carnival of sin and salvation. It brings out the best and worst in the people involved. I've seen a room of 300-plus people pour their hearts out to a poet frozen on stage, stuck between lines, then leap to their feet and scream when he finally finished the piece. I've seen poets reciting nightmare tales of child abuse, rape, and violence with tears streaming down their faces only to be consoled by competitors from opposing teams. I've seen old friends almost kill each other in a drunken brawl. I've seen a poet passed out on the floor with a beer on one side of his head, a bong on the other and a collection of Octavio Paz laid across his chest. I've seen poets so eager to win at any cost they are willing to cheat to do so. I've seen teams howling with laughter, knowing full well that the poet onstage making the audience crack up is putting them out of the running. I've seen poets from all over the world, some clothed, some naked, jump into an indoor hotel swimming pool, much to the chagrin of the management. I've seen intellectual and emotional brilliance fueled by a mixture of anticipation, fear, anger, joy, jealousy, bliss, sex, booze, and the love of the spoken word.
Another great moment occurred about two weeks ago, the David Letterman show called the director of the documentary Slam Nation and asked him if he could get the '96 Austin team (Hilary Thomas, Phil West, Danny Solis, Coach Mike Henry, and myself) to perform our group piece, "Tube" on the show. Those of you who have seen the film know that the Austin team took a royal skewering from the judges that year, so it meant a lot when the Letterman show chose our poem over all the other poems in the film.
Of course it's not all fun and games. I learned a big life lesson in Portland when I pulled our team out from behind by performing "A Real Gone Guy." In the climax of that piece, I say the words "I'm a rebel." Earlier in the bout, a woman had read a poem about what the rebel flag meant to blacks in the South. She was extremely upset with me and it took a long time for me to explain to her that I meant rebel as in "Rebel Without a Cause," without any sort of Johnny Reb connotation. It's amazing how one word can change the outcome of a situation.
After the final bout there is always a huge bash. Imagine hundreds of extroverts from all over the country, settling in to raise hell after the tension is gone. In Connecticut this party almost didn't happen when the organizers decided to make it BYOB, but the Austin team, I am proud to say, saved the day by taking up a collection and providing trashcans full of beer. At that same party, a woman had her purse stolen and in the 20 it took to catch the thief, enough money had already been collected to fly her back to her hometown. I guess what I'm trying to say is that although this is a serious competition where amazing minds come to do battle, it is also a gathering of friends ready to exchange ideas. A yearly high school reunion of sorts where veterans spin tales, neophytes get their slam cherries popped, and everyone has a big old time. At the end of the show four or five of us bask in the glory, the rest of us lick our wounds, we put our differences aside and dance our asses off, already thinking about next year.
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