Kevin Powell (Courtesy Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
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Kevin Powell (born 1966) is an African-American journalist, poet, activist, and lecturer. He currently lives and works in Brooklyn. He was born and raised in Jersey City, New Jersey, and attended Rutgers University.
He became famous when he appeared on the first season of MTV's reality television series, The Real World: New York in 1992. He is the oldest member of The Real World cast. From 1992 to 1996, he was a senior writer for Vibe magazine. He writes most notably about hip hop music and politics.
He co-founded the nonprofit community-based group Hiphop Speaks (with activist, entrepreneur, writer April Silver), which he describes as "a series of forums and MC battles geared toward using hip hop as a tool for social change." He has frequent speaking engagements at colleges, speaking about race issues, literature, and the history of hip hop that he has learned since his days on The Real World when he didn't know hip hop existed.
In 2006, he announced that he was running for the United States House of Representatives in the 10th Congressional District of New York against Representative Edolphus Towns. He later withdrew from the race. He also got punched in the mouth by a vagrant.
Books
In the Tradition: An Anthology of Young Black Writers, (1993), co-edited by Ras Baraka (ISBN 0-86316-316-5)