A graduate of Pratt’s MFA Writing and Activism Program, Jennifer Falú works full time as a social servant in a men’s shelter, as well as a traveling teaching artist and mentor with Urban Word NYC. An International Slam Champion, who made her film debut in the movie, “Mania Days” alongside Katie Holmes, as well as the Rza directed “Love, Beats, Rhymes”, alongside Jill Scott and Common, where she is credited as a writer, Falú is also featured in an Emmy Award winning documentary following the 2016 Brooklyn Slam Team, in which they compete against 90 other teams. A Cave Canem Fellow, as of 2016, she is published in several anthologies and is using her writing as activism work for several organizations. Falú’s other passion projects include “N**s Die Everyday” an art gallery she co-built and exhibit she co-curated that reconciles the legacy of racial injustice in the United States with the angst and aggression of the hip-hop generation. Aside from being a sermon editorial consultant for some of today’s most promising preachers and rocking stages and colleges with her poetry collectives, Jennifer Falú is the proud mother of two children, a loyal Brooklynite and believes in fashion. Seriously!