Waiting 4 the Bus

Waiting 4 the Bus
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Saturday, March 15, 2014

G.P.A. and Roberta Miles are Waiting 4 the Bus +open mic (March 17)

Come on out for a night of Naughty Narratives as W4tB gets invaded by a pair of Storytelling features

Open mic sign up is at 7:30 pm
Show time is from 8-10pm
Special guest host Robin Fine
We do request a donation for the feature
We do not charge a cover
The food is great
The beer selection awesome
And the poetry ever so lovingly crafted for your enjoyment

Monday ,March 17
Jaks Tap
901 w. Jackson

Friday, March 7, 2014

State of the verse 2014

I have been remiss and I apologize.  I havent written the state of the bus stop address for 2014.  I know I'm a few months late.  I've been busy dealing with personal stuff.

It seems to me that we may feel discouraged about the state of the poetry universe.  W4tB, in my mind, was formed for specific reasons.  In my head, I see it as a great power that is trying to unite the disparate elements of an increasingly fracturing poetry community.  This is, of course, the hugely idealized version of what we do.

Poets are an odd breed to begin with and there are many different approaches to how our art is achieved, or even what our art actually is.  The great debates still abound.  There are too many questions.

Should poetry be read aloud, or is it strictly a printed art form?

The W4tB answer is... Both.  A poem should be able to hang on its own whether it favors stage or page.  If a poem is both honest and true it should not matter how it is presented.  Some poems are designed to be stages, others for specific lay out on a page, and it shouldn't matter.  The same piece in either situation may reveal things not seen before.

What is the difference between slam, spoken word, and poetry?

These are terms that get mixed up and used interchangeably.  They are similar, but not the same.  I have heard some slam stuff that was fantastic poetry and have heard some poetry that was utter crap.
Slam has disciplines like time limits and a lack of props.  Poetry is not burdened by these things, and spoken word seems to be a catch all that includes storytellers and musicians that talk their way through things.

W4tB has always been trying to fight the scourge of genre.  We don't really care where you come from.  We like slammers, and storytellers, academics, and bar poets, and street poets.  We want to unite these different disciplines.  

W4tB is about a love of words.  We ain't looking for fame, we certainly ain't looking for fortune.  When you meet us, don't lead with your resume.  We don't care where you've been published.  We will share in your joy when your poem sees print on paper or the web, but "Do you still love the words?" You can have a dozen books, people can talk about you in workshops and class rooms, and it doesn't matter.  The question we are going to ask you is...did the words match the emotions, did you love the words, did they breathe the same way you did on the day you put them on paper.

The other goal of W4tB is to raise the art of poetry so that is sits up on the same shelf as theater and music and dance and maybe, incorporate elements of those arts in.the presentation of poetry.  We are trying for a mixing of the blood. poetry should be film, theater, song, dance, without compromise with only love for the art.

If this has been something that has occurred to you...Whether you believe that poetry is words on paper or one poet in the spotlight, or an ensemble making a poem into a living beast, W4tB may be what you are looking for.  You should check us out.



Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Susan Swanton and Dana Jerman are Waiting 4 the Bus (March 3)


The greatest poetry open mic in the world returns with the coolest features ever. Dana Jerman and Susan Swanton are writers with a sharpened cutting edge, a sharpened wit, and a pretty cool fashion sense too. They are awesome examples of what W4tB loves about poetry.
Join guest hosts Esteban Colon and Jude Chance in the Rendezvous room at Jaks tap 901 W Jackson
Sign up 7:30
Show time 8-10pm
40 beers on tap
Great food
We request a donation for the feature
But the show is free

Suggested theme monkeys, ninjas, clowns, and the secret sex life of Sherlock Holmes

Sunday, February 2, 2014

ECO Winter 2014 now on sale.

We're having technical problems with our website. It should be fixed in the next couple of days. In the meantime...get it while it's hot.






Monday, January 27, 2014

The Larry Janowski Birthday Poetry Extravaganza (Feb 7)


Come on out to Powell's to help us celebrate 70 years of one of Chicago's finest poets.
featured readers:
Albert DeGenova
Chris Green
Chris Gallinari
Barbara Perry
Nina Corwin
Bonnie Summers
Jan Botigleri
Patricia McMillen
Buddha 309
Esteban Colon
Tom Roby

and of course Larry Janowski
show time is at 7pm from the back room at Powell's in University Village.
Powell's Bookstore 1218 S Halsted St Chicago, IL (312) 243-9070

Al DeGenova is Waiting 4 the Bus +Open Mic (Feb 3rd)


Albert DeGenova is a poet, editor/publisher, teacher, and blues saxophonist. He grew up in Chicago and now lives with his family in Oak Park, Illinois.
He is also the feature poet at W4tB on February 3rd

come out to Jaks Tap Restaurant Bar at 901 w Jackson on Monday night for what I like to call Al DeGenova and the mystery of the blues.
Bring out all your Blues, blue, bleu related poems
as usual
sign up is at 7:30
showtime is from 8-10
5 minutes or 3 poems
good beer
excellent food
suggested donation for the feature
otherwise, admission is free.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

January 24- exact change only release party and show


these people are in the new issue.
Michael Lee Johnson
Jenene Ravesloot
Elizabeth Harper
Holly Day
Susie Sweetland
Wilda Morris
Jennifer Dotson
Caroline Johnson
some of them may be at the release party show, but I am not gonna tell ya. there will be other peolple reading too. there will be editors, and past contributors, and there might be monkeys and ponies and chocolate milk, but you are gonna have to show up to find out.

come out to
Powell's bookstore
1218 S Halsted St
Chicago, IL
(312) 243-9070
January 24
7-9pm