^B00:00:05 >> Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Welcome back to another episode, another episode, another episode, of the Write, Right, Rite your man Jason Reynolds, and today I'm looking through this book. It's called "I Too Sing America: The Harlem Renaissance at 100" and it's basically a book about during the Harlem Renaissance. A lot of dope stuff in here. I just found this one right here which I love. That is a portrait of Zora Neale Hurston by my guy Aaron Douglas. If any of you who read "All American Boys" knows how much I love Aaron Douglas. There's tons of good stuff in here. I mean like fight. I'm trying to find some of the cool stuff for you. Like really cool things like this. Ooh, super dope. And what else? I mean just brilliant, brilliant, brilliant art. And look at this. A sculpture. I can't do that, could you? Anyway, this week what we're going to do -- oh, look at this one. Jacob Morris. That was a Jacob Morris. Oh, man. See that hanging out of the corner in front of the restaurant? Anyway, what we going to do this week is I want you all to find a piece of art. Now it doesn't have to be anything as fancy as the Harlem Renaissance. It could be something that your brother made. Something that your sister drew. Something on the refrigerator already. It could be something really cool that you love. It could be an artist that you love for all the art kids out there. It could be dance. It could be a photograph, whatever it is, and I want you to respond to that photograph. Respond to that piece of art. Respond to that painting, that portrait, that sculpture and write that response. How does it make you feel? What do you see? What are you thinking? What's the story that you think is behind it? We call this [inaudible]. It's a real thing. Poets do it all the time and now I want you to try it too. Give it a shot and I'll holler at you on the next one. Oh boom, by the way, tell your little sister to stop using my toothbrush. Peace. [ Silence ] ^E00:02:07