WRITE CLUB Atlanta

Host Nicholas Tecosky welcoming a packed house at 7 Stages, Atlanta

High Octane Brain Boxing at its Finest

WRITE CLUB is the world's greatest combative philanthropic literary bloodsport, featuring only the most audacious and fearsome of writers and performers. Started in 2010 at the Hideout in Chicago by Our Illustrious Overlord Ian Belknap, WRITE CLUB has been operating in Atlanta since 2011, currently calling 7 Stages in Little 5 Points home to our monthly show.

WRITE CLUB is:
3 bouts of
2 opposing writers arguing
2 opposing ideas for
7 minutes apiece
Audience picks a winner

More at WriteClubATL.com

 

Selected Works

 
 
 

THE PASSAGE OF KITTY GENOVESE

THE PASSAGE takes you on a ride into the land of the dead, traveling with the Ferryman as he collects America’s most illustrious spirits and delivers them to the hereafter. The price of their passage? Their story. 

In this poignant and introspective episode of The Passage, the Ferryman, voiced with the profound depth and empathy of Dan Fogler (Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them, The Walking Dead), encounters a soul whose name became a symbol, a headline that seemed to speak volumes about the state of society. Kitty Genovese, voiced by Allie MacDonald, a young woman whose tragic fate sparked outrage and introspection, takes a cab ride across the void, her story a mosaic of unfulfilled dreams and a narrative hijacked by sensationalism.

As the taxi glides through the misty realms of memory and myth, Kitty reflects on her life beyond the infamous headlines. She shares her hopes, her aspirations, and the vibrant life she led—a life rich with potential and promise, yet brutally cut short on the streets of New York. Her story, for too long, was not her own, morphed by the media into a stark emblem of societal apathy and the supposed decay of communal compassion.

In this episode, the Ferryman listens intently as Kitty reclaims her narrative, her voice a gentle yet powerful rebuke to the decades of misrepresentation. She speaks of the people she loved, the dreams she nurtured, and the life she lived, not just the final moments that came to define her in the public eye.

Kitty's story challenges the listeners to reflect on the narratives we construct and the truths we choose to see or ignore. Her presence in the Ferryman's cab is a reminder that behind every headline, every statistic, is a human story, rich and complex, deserving of understanding and dignity. Written by Mykal Alder June.

Listen now on Apple PodcastsiHeartRadio AppSpotifyPandoraAmazon or wherever podcasts are made available.

 
Credit: Patrick Duffy

Credit: Patrick Duffy

Brother Hawk is Led By Love

Immersive Atlanta, November 2019. Joe Brisendine played harmonica in his son’s band, the Atlanta-based Brother Hawk, and died during the recording of their 2018 album. I spoke with JB Brisendine about love, loss, and carrying on his father’s spirit.

 

Capone on ponce

Bitter Southerner, July 2014. I heard some odd local lore about Al Capone living on Atlanta’s Ponce de Leon Avenue and in looking into it, found a prankster, a proud father, insight into why a city self-mythologizes, and WAY more about Al Capone’s colon than I wanted to know.

 
 

In our own words

ArtsATL, March 2021 — 400 words on my Filipino American experience in a time of rising hate crimes against the AAPI community.

Further Reading

Find more at my Medium profile.