KC GIFT launches ‘Vibe the City’ passport to showcase Black-owned arts, entertainment venues
September 18, 2025 | Tommy Felts
A newly published mini-guide to Black-owned arts and entertainment venues across Kansas City is expected to push community members deeper into the metro’s rich Black business ecosystem, said Brandon Calloway, highlighting a range of cultural and nightlife destinations.
“Vibe the City” passports are available now at the G.I.F.T. Business Center at 5008 Prospect Ave., as well as at select restaurants.
The initiative follows a successful “Savor The City” guide to Black-owned restaurants that was released in February by Kansas City G.I.F.T. (Generating Income for Tomorrow), a nonprofit, full-service business center that provides Black business owners in Kansas City’s historically redlined neighborhoods with equitable access to financial support through grants. It also provides free small business support to any small business in the Greater Kansas City area.
The earlier dining guide was launched in response to political efforts “to actively tear down support for Black and Brown communities,” Calloway said.
“We knew we couldn’t stop there,” he continued. “It is important for us to continue to identify innovative ways that we can drive support to Black owned businesses in a way that fosters economic equity, and KC G.I.F.T. remains dedicated to supporting Black-owned businesses through aggressive funding and support.”
The new passport features 15 Black-owned arts and entertainment venues, providing recommendations, QR codes to their websites, and an interactive feature that allows diners to rate each experience on a scale of 1 to 5 plates.
Venues featured include:
- Mutual Musicians Foundation
- In Good Company KC Lounge
- Vine Street Brewing Co.
- Vye Cocktail Lounge
- The Blakk Co.
- The Black Repertory Theatre of Kansas City
- The KC Juke House Blues & Jazz Bar/Restaurant
- Culture X
- Harris Park
- Mr Bigg’s PLACE
- The Shop Cigar Lounge
- The Black Archives of Mid-America, Inc.
- Negro Leagues Baseball Museum
- American Jazz Museum
- KC Melting Pot Theatre
People interested in helping to distribute the passports can pick up bulk quantities from the G.I.F.T. Business Center, Calloway said.
“As a community, it is up to us to actively create the world we want to see,” he added. “This passport offers a fun and engaging way for people to take action on that and make a difference by supporting local Black entrepreneurs.”

Tommy Felts
Tommy is editor-in-chief for Startland News, a Kansas City-based nonprofit newsroom that uses storytelling to elevate the region’s startup community of entrepreneurs, innovators, hustlers, creatives and risk-takers.
Under Tommy’s leadership, Startland News has expanded its coverage from a primarily high-tech, high-growth focus to a more wide-ranging and inclusive look at the faces of entrepreneurism, innovation and business.
Before joining Startland News in 2017, Tommy worked for 12 years as an award-winning newspaper journalist, designer, editor and publisher. He was named one of Editor & Publisher magazine’s top “25 Under 35” in 2014.
Related Posts on Startland News
$250K in matching funds brings Prospect Urban Eatery free culinary training closer to boil
Editor’s note: The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is a financial supporter of Startland News, though this story was produced independently by Startland News’ nonprofit newsroom. A quarter-million-dollar grant from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is expected to push The Prospect KC into operational scale in the months ahead, said Chef Shanita McAfee-Bryant. News of the…
MindSport gains traction from Olympic-level athletes as founder turns his memoir into documentary
The world of athletics has become more in tune with the importance of mental fitness, mindfulness and the impact both have on athletic performance, said Ryan Stock. “With the pandemic, obviously that shut down athletics across the board. It added a ton of stress, anxiety [and] frustration for athletes of all levels. Athletics serves as…
How a KC mom and her 12-year-old co-founder are rewriting the book on entrepreneurship
Guiding young people through the ins and outs of entrepreneurship is a family affair for Tovah Tanner, a metro woman on a mission to create a Kansas City that thinks critically, holds values, and possesses life skills that build lasting wealth. “My son, Madden Tanner, is our co-founder. He’s 12 years old,” Tanner said, recalling…
Crafted within hip hop culture, Black-owned KC cannabis brand hopes to reshape a flowering industry
It isn’t enough to be first, Ronald Rice said, announcing Franklin’s Stash House’s entry into Greenlight stores — a move that sees the Kansas City cannabis company become the first Black-owned brand sold at a dispensary in the state. “While this deal represents a big milestone in the evolution of Missouri’s cannabis industry, the legacy of…
