Every year there’s a champion of the Scripps National Spelling Bee, and each year they’re impressive, incredible children who are way smarter than any of us, and destined to dominate their chosen fields to be future leaders of America. Notice that effusive praise misses one key word: “cool.” It’s tough to say the winner of the spelling bee is demonstrably cool, but now that’s all changed.
On Thursday night, 14-year-old Zalia Avant-garde of Louisiana took home the prize by spelling “murraya,” while flexing on the bee by goofing around and making a Bill Murray reference.
“Does this word contain like the English word murray, which would be the name of a comedian?”
In winning the competition, Avant-garde became the first black American student to capture the Scripps National Spelling Bee, prompting the world to learn more about her — and when we did, it was incredible.
As great a speller as Avante-garde is, the 14-year-old might be a better basketball player. She holds three Guinness World Records for trick dribbling, appeared in a Stephen Curry commercial in 2018, and has a twitter account littered with he basketball exploits.