Grand 'Slam!' Team of Houston Teen Poets Crowned National Champs at San Francisco Festival

Grand 'Slam!' Team of Houston Teen Poets Crowned National Champs at San Francisco Festival

The 2023 Meta-Four team (photo courtesy of Writers in the Schools)

BIG NEWS! ON July 22, Houston youth poetry team Meta-Four won the national championship in the Brave New Voices International Youth Poetry Slam Festival, which took place in San Francisco. It’s a first-time first-place win for the team, which in previous incarnations, has always done well competing against other teenage teams from around the globe in semi-final slam bouts. This year, the top four teams — representing Houston, New York, Nashville and Sacramento — competed in four rounds of spoken-word performance in the historic Herbst Theater for the finals. Houston, we’re proud to say, took the top spot.


“Our students have worked so hard to get to this very moment,” said Raie Crawford in a statement. “Being able to see our students take the stage, amplifying their personal stories through performance poetry is proof of how truly diverse the arts are in the city of Houston.”

Founded in 2007, Meta-Four Houston is a program of Writers in the Schools (WITS), and each year welcomes a new combination of young poets from all over the city into its ranks. Under the tutelage of Houston Poet Laureate Emeritus Emmanuel “Outspoken” Bean, co-coach Alinda "Adam" Mac, and coaching intern Norah Rami, Meta-Four team members Adriana Winkelmayer, Samiyah Green, Myaan Sonenshein, Isabella Diaz-Mira, Ariana Lee (who is currently Houston’s Youth Poet Laureate), and Kylan Denney developed their writing and poetry performance skills. The poems they chose to deliver at Brave New Voices addressed such topics as women’s health, the refugee crisis, race relations, and the human condition.

Since 1983, WITS has partnered with authors, journalists, and spoken word performers, like Bean, to introduce young students to the power of language, be it the written word, or a poem delivered with all of the theatrical aplomb of a rock star or hip-hop artist. But tellingly, in a 2018 interview for Houston CityBook, Bean explained the opportunity for Meta-Four to compete against hundreds of other gifted teenage poets from across the world is really “a by-product” of what each poet comes away with as a member of Meta-Four. “I’m not trying to raise an army of poets,” said Bean. “I am trying to raise a crop of people who put their best efforts into whatever it may be, be it schoolwork, a protest, mentoring, whatever.”

Thrive & Inspire: Creating ’Something Bigger Than Ourselves’ Drives Gooch and Pappas of RYDE

Ashley Gooch and Andrew Pappas, Co-Founders

WHAT INSPIRES YOU as you grow RYDE? The RYDE community and our team inspire us every day. The goal from the start was to create something that is bigger than ourselves — our community is just that. We want to push the limits of what a fitness experience can be. Our new Heights studio is a testament to that commitment, offering a high-energy indoor cycling experience in a stunning space. RYDE Heights opens in April, exactly eight years after our first location opened on West Gray in River Oaks.

Keep Reading Show less

Casey Axelrod, Stacey White, Christy Robinson, Laura Lewis and Mia Oliva

PETE BELL'S COTTON Holdings company, known for never doing anything halfway when it comes to parties, celebrated the return of the of the A&M-UT football game after a 13-year hiatus with the most lavish tailgating more gridiron fans have ever seen.

Keep Reading Show less
Style+Culture

David Cordua

FOODIES WITH BIG hearts were in heaven at the annual Signature Chefs restaurants expo and fundraising dinner benefitting the March of Dimes. Held at The Revaire and chaired by Kristen J. Cannon and Mignon Gill, the event took in some $425,000 in support of healthier mothers and children.

Keep Reading Show less