Entrepreneur meets with VP Harris; surprised DC already knew about KC’s first Black-owned brewery
May 20, 2023 | Matthew Gwin
Word travels.
A roundtable discussion this week with Vice President Kamala Harris gave Kemet Coleman an opportunity to put his city, and specifically the 18th and Vine neighborhood, on an elevated platform, the Kansas City entrepreneur and musician said.
Coleman — one of three co-founders of the soon-to-be-opened Vine Street Brewing, Missouri’s first Black-owned brewery — represented Kansas City in a conversation focused on entrepreneurship in communities of color. He was selected on the recommendation of KCMO Mayor Quinton Lucas.
“I think my main takeaway was just representing Kansas City, and especially 18th and Vine, and putting 18th and Vine on a national stage,” Coleman said. “The neighborhood has so much potential — just like Beale Street, the French Quarter, and Harlem — and I think the country is curious about it as well.”
Harris and her staff shared their excitement about Vine Street Brewing, which Coleman described as “mind-blowing,” and left him speechless.
“I literally just said, ‘What?’” he recalled. “I was just so shocked. I wasn’t expecting them to know who we are.”
The whole experience was wild, Coleman said, adding that being in Washington D.C., and specifically inside the White House, instilled within him a sense of awe and pride.
“Sometimes you forget that and feel disconnected,” Coleman acknowledged. “This country obviously has issues, but being there and being amongst the folks who are working to make sure the government runs was really cool.”
During the roundtable discussion, Coleman said, he and the other invited guests shared their entrepreneurial successes and failures, and the reasons behind those, with the vice president and other government officials.
Access to capital and how to effectively scale a company were also key topics of discussion, Coleman said, adding that the invited entrepreneurs also had an opportunity to network among themselves.
“It was a great opportunity to make connections at a federal level, and I made some really, really good connections there,” he shared.
The whole week has been a whirlwind for Coleman, who said he received a text from Mayor Lucas on Saturday asking if he would be interested in representing Kansas City.
“Honestly, I didn’t really believe the text,” Coleman admitted. “I thought it must have been somebody pranking me.”
Eventually, he realized this offer was indeed the real deal, since the texts came from the same number Coleman has used to communicate with Lucas in the past; the two have known each other since sixth grade, he said.
Coleman then received full details in an email from the White House on Sunday and booked a last-minute flight to Washington D.C. for Monday, which he said was well worth it.
“I had to scramble to make it happen, but I got invited to the White House, so of course I had to make it happen,” Coleman said.
Simply being selected by Lucas was an honor, Coleman said, noting how many deserving people could represent Kansas City.
Now, Coleman plans to build off the momentum of his White House visit to keep representing Kansas City and 18th and Vine.
“This trip was a great advancement [of that mission] because it was on a national stage,” Coleman said. “If you search ‘Vine Street Brewing,’ and ‘the White House,’ there is a match now, so that’s something I’m proud about. I want to continue to push 18th and Vine, as well as Kansas City, everywhere I go.”
A veteran hip hop artist in Kansas City, Coleman released his latest album Duality April 21.

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Bungii hires former C2FO exec for CFO role; startup delivers on new consumer demands
Ratcheting through the stages of a growing startup is easier with an experienced professional under the hood, said Ben Jackson, drawing upon the comparison of scaling to “chewing glass while staring into the abyss.” “Companies fundamentally change as various revenue thresholds are surpassed,” said Jackson, co-founder of Bungii. “A seed stage company looks completely different…
Come on (down) Now! AltCap Your Biz awards $37K in prizes with a familiar face earning biggest win of the night
The founder’s story can be the most important part of a startup’s pitch, Dr. Shelley Cooper shared after clinching the $25,000 grand prize at Thursday’s AltCap Your Biz: Pitch Competition. “Everybody else had a lot more financials in their pitch, and I took all that stuff out. I focused on telling my story the way…
Panel: Teachers can’t just ‘fail fast’ with students, but plugging entrepreneurship into classrooms builds agility in both
As someone with a hand in both education and entrepreneurship, Tiffany Dixon recognizes that a gap between the two is limiting potential in Kansas City schools. “There is an ecosystem that teachers don’t realize exists around their classroom,” she explained during a “Youth: Our Future Entrepreneurs” panel discussion for Global Entrepreneurship Week – Kansas City.…
VIDEO: How KC-built Engenious Design is scaling with stealth to atmospheric heights
Editor’s note: Engenious Design is a financial supporter of Startland News. This video feature was produced through a paid partnership. From life-saving medical devices to unexpected innovations taking orbit, Engenious Design — a white label manufacturing and design firm headquartered in Prairie Village — might be Kansas City’s best-kept success story, teased Chris Justice, principal…




