PODCAST · society
Phynnecabulary
by Phynnecabulary
Poet residing in the SF Bay Area in the floufy pandemonium of errant ideas.
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130
“THE POINT OF COLLISION,” AN ORIGINAL POEM BY AMIYA MORETTA
Amiya is a Fulbright scholar, founder of Stand in the Gap Poetry Collective, and longlist recipient of the Steel Toe Book 2020 Poetry Prize.
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129
EDITH “BLACKBIRD” TAPIA: BIG, BAD B*STARD (A Sensually Scary Story for the Spooky Season)
In this episode, Edith tells us a little about her creative background, and then takes along with her down a lesser traveled path, a fresh, frightening retelling of a hungry wolves lurking in the shadows, and unsuspecting little girls. *** Edith Tapia aka “Blackbird” is a queer writer/poet/performer from Mexico, with a “declamation style.” There in Mexico in 2005, Edith placed second in a nationwide poetry contest. In 2007, The Sonora University published her in their anthology, “Realidad Aleatoria.” Now based in the USA, Edith attends live events, sharing her bilingual art. She has been featured in the Austin Poetry Society in 2018, and also published in their anthology, in 2020. Edith has been featured in the Lion and Pirate event facilitated by Malvern Books, in 2020. That same year, she was featured in the Waterfront Immersive Arts Festival. Edith was published in “Sinew: 10 Years of Poetry in the Brew,” anthology in 2021. She has also been interviewed on www.hearsaypoetry.com . Edith currently co-hosts a monthly virtual open mic called Lenguas, that promotes cultural diversity and art. Please follow Edith! - Facebook Writer Page: https://www.facebook.com/edithblackbirdfly - Facebook Lenguas Page: https://www.facebook.com/lenguasdiversity/ - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/e.blackbirdfly - Twitter: https://twitter.com/BlackbirdEdith/ - Website is in progress…
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128
MICHAEL SINDLER: SEVEN VIGNETTES
Michael Sindler, a native of South Carolina, has called Denver home for over a decade. He is a writer whose work crosses genres and includes fiction, non-fiction, memoir, poetry, theatre, and songwriting. His work has been published in various print and web venues including seven anthologies in the past year, and he has collaborated with and participated in a number of media bridging projects and productions with arts organizations including The Stratus Chamber Orchestra, Colorado Ballet, Sounds on Stage, University of Denver Department of Theater, Ruddy Duck Theater, Denver Botanic Gardens, Write Denver, The Lighthouse Writers Center, The Hard Times Writers Group, and others. He has been a featured reader at LitFest in 2017 and 2018, The Clyfford Still Museum, the American Museum of Western Art, the Denver Public Library, the Denver City Council, the Walk and Ride of Silence Commemorative Presentation, 40 West Arts, and the 30th and 31st Annual Podeo Celebrations of National Poetry Month. He has featured in virtual (and IRL) poetry readings, performances, and workshops across the globe, both on his own and as part of the Beardo Bards of the Bardo with Bryan Franco and Dane Ince. In this episode: Introduction by Storyteller, Michael Sindler I. "Ernest & Ray at the End of the Day" II. "Impact" III. "Close to Good" IV. "Colfax Interlude" V. "Miracles Are Where You Find 'Em" VI. "Monday Mourning" VII. "Get In"
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127
“THE OTHER WORLD,” AND ORIGINAL STORY BY CHRISTINE HALL
Christine Hall is a Nashville, Tennessee-based poet, and host of the Poetry in the Brew Open Mic.
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126
PHILLIP HENRY CHRISTOPHER: DISCARDED CHOCOLATE
In this episode: *Discarded Chocolate, 1: Rudy and LaDonna* *Discarded Chocolate, 2: Jack and Darlene* *Discarded Chocolate, 3: Bobby and Julia*. Poet, novelist, and singer/songwriter Phillip Henry Christopher spent his early years in France, Germany, and Greece. His nomadic family then took him to Mississippi, Georgia, Ohio, and Vermont, before settling in the steel mill town of Coatesville, Pennsylvania, where he grew up in the smokestack shadows of blue collar America. Escaping high school, he made Philadelphia his home, alternating between Philly and cities across America, living for a time in Buffalo, New Orleans, Fort Worth,even remote Fairfield, Iowa, before settling in Indianapolis. While wandering America, he has placed poems and stories in publications across the country, in Europe, and Asia. He is the author of two books of poetry and is searching the planet for a publisher for his novel, Prospero’s Dream. (**All music in this episode are original pieces courtesy of Phillip Henry Christopher)
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125
KEMLYN TAN BAPPE: POETRY OF POTTERY/SUMMER OF HEALING
Week 9 Storyteller: Kemlyn Tan Bappe is a multi-disciplinary artist with expressions in poetry, theatre, spoken word, visual art and dance originally from Singapore, working as a special education teacher in Arizona. She is on the Youtube Webshow, "The Poets Reacts" by The Poetry Global Network. Her poems have published by SingLit Station and Squircle Line Press in Singapore. As a performance artist, Tan Bappe is active in online open mics and programs around the world. She toured with two repertory companies. Her artwork is found in collections internationally. In 2009, she was awarded the VSA Teaching Artist Fellowship in Washington D.C. ~~ In this episode: ** Poetry of Pottery ** Summer of Healing **
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124
RAY JANE: STORIES
Ray Jane is a Black, female, Brooklyn-born poet raised in Queens, New York. Find out more about Ray and her writing at www.itsrayjane.com.
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123
UNMESH MOHITKAR: POETRY MAN OF THE SACRED MOUNTAINS
Unmesh Mohitkar is a poet and writer who hails from Pune, India. He is the author of the poetry collection, “Light Shadow Life.” He has performed at multiple international open mics and spoken word events, including the Singapore and San Jose Poetry Festival. He is a regular performer at The Nuyorican Poets Cafe Online Open Mic. Unmesh writes in three languages, and is a globetrotter who has visited twenty-two countries. In this episode: The Stunningly Beautiful Mountains of Kashmir • I Love Horror Poems! • Revolution
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122
TALES OF TRAVEL BY MARK (“POET WITH GUITAR”) FISHBEIN
In this episode: Wolves Prefer Puccini • Baboons Prefer Samba • Dubai Tales
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121
“Bottom Out,” An Original Story by Denise Saenz
Meet Denise Saenz, our second storyteller of Season 6. Denise is a poet from El Paso, Texas and author of the recent poetry collection, “Belly of the Snake.” She is an exciting, emerging new voice in the 2021 poetry landscape that would not want to miss. In the episode: Denise Saenz: Descent & Emergence • “Bottom Out,” An Original Story From the Mind of Denise Saenz
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120
Phynne Reads Poe’s “The Oval Portrait”
Roll with the punches and you get the Master of the Macabre • Phynne Reads Poe’s “The Oval Mirror” • If You Gave a Poet Something to Write...
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119
Halloween is a Thirty-One Day Thing!
* Enough Cheetopia, More Tom Burton! * “November 2: Día de los Muertos,” Alberto Ríos * “Zombie,” Hadara Bar-Nadav * “Ghost Music,” Robert Graves * A Big Thank You!
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118
Still and Waiting and Motion (and Immigrants and Country We Love)
In droves. • “On How to use this Book,” Sarah Gambito • “When I hated My Body,” Sarah Gambito. • “Adrift,” Bao Phi. • “Practice Standing Unleashed and Clean,” Patricia Smith. • Where to find me.
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117
Did You Wait for Me?
Making Autumn • I Read My Oeigonal Poem, Daybreak” • Pixie Dust Me on Ko-fi .com!
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116
"The Ring," An Original Story by Janice De Jesus, Part 3
The final part of the ninth story in our summer, "Can I Tell You a Story?" series. Segment 1: Full Circle Segment 2: Tricia Reads Part 3 of "The Ring" Segment 3: Soulstice
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115
"The Ring," An Original Story by Janice De Jesus, Part 2
Part two of the ninth story in our summer "Can I Tell You a Story?" series * Is This a Meet-Cute...or What? * Phynne Reads, "The Ring" * Check me out on ko-fi.com
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114
"The Ring," An Original Story by Janice De Jesus, Part 1
The ninth story in our summer "Can I Tell You a Story?" series Segment 1 Resilient Soul: Featured writer, Janice De Jesus Segment 2 "The Ring," a story by Janice De Jesus Segment 3 Look out for Janice's newest book out later this month!
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113
“Rosa Birhen,” An Original Story by Tricia DeJesus-Gutierrez
The eighth story in our summer “Can I Tell You a Story?” Series • You can take the girl out of Catholic school... • Phynne Reads “Rosa Birhen.” • Handy dandy Tagalog glossary • Thanks a million for listening!
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112
“Berkeley Nights, “ An Original Story by Tricia De Jesus-Gutierrez
The seventh story in our “Can I Tell You a Story” series • Back to One • Tricia Reads, “Berkeley Nights • We Can Talk Over a Cup of Coffee!
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111
“The Sequencer,” An Original Story by Ana Galvan, Part 2
The second part of the sixth story in our summer “Can I Tell You a Story?” series.
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110
“The Sequencer,” an Original Story by Ana Galvan, Part 1
The sixth story in our summer “Can I Tell You a Story?” series. 1. Jill of All Trades: Ana Galvan • “The Sequencer,” a story by Ana Galvan • Support indie authors—buy their books!
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109
“What a Doll!” An Original Story from Tricia DeJesus-Gutierrez
Horror Be Her Name: Poet Tricia DeJesus-Gutierrez • What a Doll! I. Just Another Saturday at Miller’s • II. Slighted • III. The Shortcut • IV. Paper Dolls, Blue Eyes, Red Blood
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108
“Every Color Stands Bright,” An Original Story by Jedediah Smith
In the Middle of His World: Poet and Writer, Jedediah Smith • Jedediah Reads His Story, “Every Color Stands Bright” • Hope You Have a Positive Week!
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107
“7016 15th Street, Apartment 425. The Stairwell.”An Original Story by Stephanie Licudine.
A romantic heart:Stephanie Licudine • I read S. Licudine’s “7016 15th Street...” • Support poets and storytellers!
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106
“Love at First Sight,” a tale narrated by Jon Gourdine
The second story in our summer “Can I Tell You a Story?” series. • Creator of Worlds, Jon Gourdine • Jon Gourdine reads, Love at First Sight” • Please support writers and poets!
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105
Can I Tell You a Story?
I’d like to kick off the month of July with a bit of summer storytelling. Today is the first story in a series of short stories to be shared over the next four weeks. It’s story time, kids • Proceed with Caution • Open Mic Thursday! announcement
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104
Love Still Lingers
I read Rainer Maria Rilke’s “I Am Much Too Alone in This World, Yet Not Alone.”
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103
Love SHOULD Be in the Air
L-O-V-E • Garcia-Lorca • Sarton • Hunt • Summer Love Open Mic
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102
Busting Out of Our Very Skin
Temperatures escalate/ Tempers rise • “We are Searching the Night for the Moon.” Part 1 • “We are Searching the Night for the Moon,” Part 2
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101
Last Dance Reprise (a love song sang softly to my Mama walking away)
ONE breath * TWO breaths * THREE breaths
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100
“Named Must Be Your Fear, Before Banish It You Can”
Yoda is my co-pilot • “If You’re Going to Look Like a Wolf...” Abigail Chabitnoy • Thank you! Lights On!
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99
We Find the Rhythm
Rituals • “Wood’s Edge,” Brenda Hillman • Join me in Open Mic!
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98
Address the Rage
Stepbystepbystep • Stepbystepbystep2 • “Having Words,” Alfred Corn • “To All My Friends,” May Yang • “Feel Piece 4,” Hannah Ensor and Laura Wetherington • “On Emotion,” Jennifer Chang • Thank you. Love.
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97
The Smoothie Incident
National Ex-Spouse Day, WaitSayWhaat?! * A Peculiar Green * Thank you from the bottom of my <3 always!
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96
Horror Where You Find It
A lockdown worth of horror • Pass the fake blood, please. • All in for a good jump scare • “The Horror Movie,” Ana Galván • The voices say hello. We mean, thank you.
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95
April is National Poetry Month
New Normal • Read Poetry and Germinate • “Words for Departure,” Louise Bogan • A Big, Yummy Thank You
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94
Let a Little Love Go a Long Way
We all need a little reassurance of love and caring still being very present in the world. I only hope I can place a little more light today in yours. **Like Rain Blessing the Parched Earth**
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93
Raise Your Hand If You Have Angered the Gods Recently
From my solitary pea pod to yours • Mañana Mañana, a poem by Rooster Cogburn • Fuggetaboutit, a poem by Affluent Pauper • Upon Our Palms, Crimson, a poem by Tricia De Jesus • Please show your support for creative minds
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92
Creation
February and the Chinese Zodiac Kitty • Creative Slump, I Banish Thee! • Malakas at Maganda, Part 1 • Malakas at Maganda, Part 2 • YOU are my cheering squad!
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91
Kindness + Fairytales
It takes two weeks to form a habit, I’m told • A good word or deed, a striking of pixie dust • “Abadeha,” adapted by Myrna J. De la Paz • “Abadeha,” part 2 • “Abadeha,” part 3 • “Abadeha,” part 4 • Your support sustains us
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90
Commonplace Supernatural: folklore and a tiny spattering of ghost stories
Are you up for a little ghost story? • Spain brought their faith, but our own deities were already here. • Dhe Combes her long, black hair workout a word. • Sjow some respect, skeptical heathen! • Gairy rice cakes. Yum! • Clap if you believe. • Language Lesson • Thanks for hanging out. Hope you sleep well tonight.
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89
My Filipino Story, Part One (Jasmine-Scented Night)
How ‘bout them Niners/Where is Puppy Bowl•All Good Things•Jasmine Scented Night
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88
In Pursuit of a Beautiful Life Upon Which We Can Write Our Name in Gold
I am still stunned and heartbroken 🌻 Tomorrow is on loan 🌻 “Death to Paint Us,” J. Michael Martinez
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87
You Can Call It Hate, I Call It Meh.
“Presenting You, and the Adversarial Edition Palette,” Tricia De Jesus • “Enemies,” Wendell Berry • “I Will Write Songs Against You,” Charles Reznikoff • “Slander,” Franz Wright
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86
In the Necessary Quiet
Surprising Angels • “Loving What Remains, “ an original poem by Phynne a.k.a. Tricia De Jesus
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85
Fear
“Fear,” a poem by Soaring Skylark • Today I will walk through my fears • “Respiration,” a poem by Jamaal May • Be strong. Be well.
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84
You Know That New Year Episode is Inevitable
Have a bright, hope-filled, brave 2020.
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83
Amidst the Holiday Rush Comes Buoys Bobbing
Holiday traditions • Nose above water
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82
Never Regrets
No Looking Back, Be in the Present • To the Rose upon the Rood of Time • Back to Bed? No, Seize the Day!
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81
You Only Get One, So Be Gentle
Reading of my original poem, “Pebble Urchin” • Phynnecabulary is now at 2 AM on Tuesdays
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