DOPE Magazine - Western Washington - The Entertainment Issue - February 2018

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SUPER TROOPERS 2 PROFILE

CULTURE

ENTERTAINMENT

CULTURE

JOHN WATERS MAKES TROUBLE SOUND GOOD

DOPE ON THE ROAD: LAS VEGAS

COCO JENKINS AND NAT THE LIONESS: THE POETIC HIP-HOP DUO

HAS THE INTERNET MADE PORNOGRAPHY TOO ACCESSIBLE?

DEFENDING OUR PLANT EVERYWHERE

PROFILE FUNKADELIC REEFER HUNTING WITH SINGER KENDRA FOSTER


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FEBRUARY 2018 | THE ENTERTAINMENT ISSUE

EDITOR’S LETTER

TOP VIDEOS

SUPER TROOPERS

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ebruary marks the month of entertainment here at DOPE Magazine, and few things are more entertaining than movies! Renowned comedy troupe Broken Lizard, famous for everything from Super Troopers to Beerfest, is back with a long-awaited sequel: Super Troopers 2. Steve Lemme and Kevin Heffernan joined us for a quick smoke, some crazy stories about the making of both Super Troopers films, their careers and how cannabis is—and has always been—a part of their lives.

BEHIND-THE-SCENES SHENANIGANS

We head to Vegas to chat with the rap/cello duo Nat the Lioness and CoCo Jenkins, who reveal how they met, why they left L.A. and how they both fell in love with music at a young age. They also discuss the possibility of new collaborations on the horizon. We can’t wait to see where their journey will take them! Jessimae Peluso, comedian and L.A.-based dispensary owner, shared with us that she doesn’t smoke to get high, but smokes to “get right.” She’s appeared as a guest on Girl Code, Getting Doug with High and Comedy Central’s The High Court. Her involvement in the cannabis space stemmed from her desire to help those suffering from opioid dependency, among other addictions and ailments.

MORE FROM JASON SILVA

VR, MIND EXPANSION, AUTOMATION AND MORE

Best known for cult films such as Pink Flamingos and Desperate Living, as well as the 1988 major motion picture Hairspray (now a successful Broadway show, which spawned a 2007 remake of the same name), John Waters is an American pop culture icon. When asked how he maintains self-confidence in the cutthroat world of show business, Waters remarks, “I don’t think anyone in show business has self-confidence . . . Because why else would they go into a field where strangers have to like us to make a living?” Our Entertainment Issue is packed with in-depth features on artists and entertainers from all walks of life. It’s a diverse collection of profiles, interviews and thoroughly researched culture articles from a group of global writers who all have one thing in common—their appreciation and respect for the plant.

DINING WITH DOPE

MORE DELICIOUS INFUSED RECIPES

To view these and more DOPE videos, visit: DOPEMAGAZINE.COM/VIDEOS

Stay DOPE! The DOPE Editorial Team

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DOPE MAGAZINE FEBRUARY 2018 | THE ENTERTAINMENT ISSUE Februar y marks the month of entertainment here at DOPE Magazine, and few things are more entertaining than movies! Renowned comedy troupe Broken Lizard, famous for everything from Super Troopers to Beerfest, is back with a long-awaited sequel: Super Troopers 2. Steve Lemme and Kevin Heffernan joined us for a quick smoke, some crazy stories about the making of both Super Troopers films, their careers and how cannabis is— and has always been—a part of their lives.

SUPER TROOPERS DO IT AGAIN PROFILE

CULTURE

ENTERTAINMENT

CULTURE

JOHN WATERS MAKES TROUBLE SOUND GOOD

DOPE ON THE ROAD: LAS VEGAS

COCO JENKINS AND NAT THE LIONESS: THE POETIC HIP-HOP DUO

HAS THE INTERNET MADE PORNOGRAPHY TOO ACCESSIBLE?

PROFILE FUNKADELIC REEFER HUNTING WITH SINGER KENDRA FOSTER

COVER PHOTO: JORDAN SWENSON

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EFENDING UR LANT VERYWHERE As a lifestyle publication, DOPE Magazine is dedicated to creating purposeful, relevant conversations. We’ve built a steadfast framework of inclusivity when speaking about gender, race, class, politics, family and culture—with the ethos DEFEND. Not just our plant, but our people, patients, and planet. Our highly curated content continues to focus on people and lifestyles that have a relationship with cannabis. While cannabis remains our central theme, it is our belief that creating conversations about real people and relatable experiences is the best way to normalize the understanding of cannabis in society as a whole. Our aim is to continue to illuminate issues that deserve our attention and must be addressed if we wish to both promote and create change. We are grateful for your time, we welcome your feedback, and are truly grateful for your participation to create positive change in our world. Defending Our Plant Everywhere.

Subscribe for home delivery at dopemagazine.com/subscribe


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MAC AND FARVA ARE BACK! SUPER TROOPERS 2

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PHOTOGRAPHY: FOX SEARCHLIGHT


T H E E N T E R TA I N M E N T I S S U E

TABLE OF CONTENTS

FEATURES 32 CULTURE

COMEDIAN JESSIMAE PELUSO’S NEW DISPENSARY

RUNNING A BUSINESS IS NO LAUGHING MATTER! 36 CULTURE

ADULT ENTERTAINMENT

HAS THE INTERNET MADE PORNOGRAPHY TOO ACCESSIBLE? 42 PROFILE

FUNKADELIC REEFER HUNTING

SINGER KENDRA FOSTER ON HER COLLABORATIONS AND INTERNATIONAL ADVENTURES 48 PROFILE

JOHN WATERS MAKES TROUBLE SOUND GOOD SPEAKING VOLUMES ON HIS FIRST RECORD 52 ENTERTAINMENT

GREAT DANE

TOP DAWG CHALLENGING THE STATUS QUO 58 ENTERTAINMENT

COCO JENKINS AND NAT THE LIONESS LAS VEGAS’ VERSATILE, POETIC HIP-HOP DUO 62 ENTERTAINMENT

HAVE YOU EVER MET THAT FUNNY REEFER MAN? THE ORIGIN OF THE JAZZ CIGARETTE 64

#SCOUTEDBYDOPE 66 DOPESHOTS

WINNER LEIGHLANI WIGLITTON 68 EDITOR’S CHOICE

SISTERS OF THE VALLEY

THE WEED NUNS’ HEAVENLY CBD PRODUCTS 70 CULTURE

DOPE ON THE ROAD LAS VEGAS

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C O V E R F E AT U R E

SUPER TROOPERS 2 DAVID BAILEY JORDAN SWENSON &

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COURTESY OF FOX SEARCHLIGHT

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


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ittering and...? Littering and….? Littering and…? Littering and… smokin’ the reefer.” There’s a number of quotes I could pull from Super Troopers right meow. I mean, it infected an entire generation, teenagers and adults alike. We were all quoting it—maybe too much. One could say it even set the scene for numerous cult classics to follow, including Broken Lizard’s Beerfest. As one of the most iconic cult classics to date, Super Troopers’ comedic approach began normalizing cannabis before most of us knew what NORML was. Treated as just another accessory to their shenanigans, marijuana was both the main storyline and the comedic relief in the film. Even in the conservative South where I grew up, dads and their teenagers were laughing at the same pot jokes and images of state troopers getting high at the station. As Broken Lizard members Steve Lemme and Kevin Heffernan tease now, “At our stand-up shows, it’s half stoners and half cops!”

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Here we are 17 years later, and Super Troopers 2 is finally hitting the screens on no better day than 4/20. Every stoner’s favorite holiday. These guys have been busy since Super Troopers took off, and while we’ve all enjoyed their movies since, this has been a long-awaited sequel for fans. Broken Lizard, as a group, has executed five major film productions since their inception, not to mention the individual careers they’ve each spawned from their inaugural success. And they’re still at it!

THE EARLY DAYS OF BROKEN LIZARD

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Essentially just five dudes that went to college together, destined to become the members of Broken Lizard sought to turn their passion for film, sketches and bullshitting into a career. Jay Chandrasekhar, Steve Lemme, Kevin Heffernan, Paul Soter and Erik Stolhanske all had an interest in film and acting as students, but, like most people at that age, didn’t have a solid career direction. While the majority of the group finished their degrees—as Kevin likes to point out, “Lemme dropped out!”—they all moved to New York City over the course of a few years and began doing sketch comedy together before deciding to try their hand at filmmaking. Watching The Tinfoil Monkey Agenda, one of their first shorts, you get a feel for their signature humor and direction. Their first fulllength film, Puddle Cruiser, was a breakout college comedy in many respects, but as Kevin fondly recalls, “We didn’t know shit when we did that one. We didn’t know anything!”


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IF THAT COP KNEW HOW HIGH WE WERE, HE COULDA FUCKED WITH US.

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SUPER TROOPERS Puddle Cruiser garnered attention in the festival circuit, but no one could’ve seen the hilarity coming that was Super Troopers. Despite the debauchery, the film, at its core, is entirely relatable. This wasn’t by accident. Some of the best scenes, and even the original inspiration for the film, came from real life. “The cops thing [from Super Troopers] was [based on] us driving around,” Steve told us. “Five us were in a car and we were going to all these weddings—and we would be high, and we kept getting pulled over, and we’d be talking shit—and then the cop would come up to the car and we’d kiss his ass—‘Yes sir, no sir, sorry sir’—and then he’d walk away,” Steve laughs. “And we were like, ‘We shoulda fuckin’ killed that guy!’ But we [joked later], ‘If that cop knew how high we were, he coulda fucked with us,’ and that was sort of the genesis [of Super Troopers].”

CLUB DREAD, BEERFEST AND BEYOND Taking little time off between projects, the group quickly started on Club Dread after the success of Super Troopers. They still reminisce about the warm beach weather while filming in Mexico, but the workload on Club Dread was far from easy. Broken Lizard members all play a direct hand in writing, directing and producing everything they make together, in addition to their onscreen roles. If you’ve seen The Dukes of Hazard (2005), you’ll recall cameos from each of the Broken Lizard members—that’s because Jay directed the film, solidifying a relationship with Warner Bros. that eventually led to the creation of Beerfest. Beerfest, like Super Troopers, developed an enormous cult following and likely inspires thousands of frat boys to drink themselves silly annually. It’s also one of their best received films to date. It didn’t hurt that they brought in pot icon Willie Nelson for a post-credits scene and started rumors of a Potfest sequel. We’re still waiting for that one, but Super Troopers 2 will tide us over in the meantime.

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SMOKING WITH STEVE AND KEVIN If at this point you don’t remember which one is Steve and which one is Kevin, Steve Lemme played Mac in Super Troopers (the crazy one who ‘steals’ the Miata in the opening scene), and Kevin Heffernan played Farva (the awkward idiot who puts soap in Rabbit’s coffee, among other things). That’s right, I got to kick it with Mac and Farva. The 14-yearold fan in me that fell in love with their work years ago needed to calm the fuck down, and, luckily for me, they were super chill. As I walked around the corner of the parking garage with Josh Shelton of Green Street Agency to greet the guys, I saw Steve standing comfortably outside liked he lived at the place. Lacking even the slightest air of pretentiousness, Steve and Kevin were both ready to hang out, but get shit done in the process—a skillset few people possess. As we finished up the photoshoot and prepared for the interview, Josh politely sparked up a few joints for everyone. Having had the chance to smoke with quite a few celebrities, I immediately noticed that these guys were different. They were normal. These guys are dads, husbands, businessmen. They asked what we thought of the new recreational cannabis market in California, the political climate we’re all enduring, even how our days were going. And shit, they were funny! We weren’t smoking a lot—it was probably the perfect amount to consume before an interview, actually—and Kevin hit me with a story every smoker can relate to: Being too high to talk. Broken Lizard once smoked with Snoop Dogg, and he got them way too lit. Apparently, the opportunity to meet Snoop came shortly after Super Troopers, and, as Steve laments to this day, “We’re lightweights.” They weren’t prepared for what was to come. After a few rounds in the traditional stoner circle, Snoop had them all too faded to talk. It was dead silent. Snoop asked them a question, and no one responded. Finally, after a long silence, Snoop asked, “Ain’t y’all motherfuckers supposed to be the funny ones?!” They guys nearly cried from laughter and were finally able to come out of their haze. As we finished up the interview and played our “Do You Even Vape, Bro”? game—where we ask people to choose between two celebrities and determine which one vapes e-cigarettes—we continued to see a fuller picture of the Broken Lizard crew. These guys are hard-working, passionate individuals looking to make you laugh—and hopefully laugh a bit themselves while doing it. Luckily for us, they’ve been hard at work for something we’ve all longawaited: Super Troopers 2. BROKENLIZARD.COM @BROKENLIZARD @THEREALBROKENLIZARD @BROKENLIZARD

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SPECIAL THANKS TO FOX SEARCHLIGHT AND GREEN STREET AGENCY. D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


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ou may recognize Jessimae Peluso from her stand-up, or her guest appearances on Girl Code, Getting Doug With High and Comedy Central’s The High Court. Peluso has been doing standup for 14 years, starting out in New York and later moving to California in 2013. Between meetings, touring, shooting pilots, hosting her own late show and building her TV profile, she’s somehow found time to open a dispensary, LA Flora Organica. It was only a year ago that the idea of opening a dispensary crossed her mind. Soon it will be a reality. Peluso and her trusted business partner, Travis, want to improve people’s lives. She says the process has been like painting: “You add a color, walk away . . . add something else…”

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M

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I DON’T SMOKE TO GET HIGH. I SMOKE TO GET RIGHT. – COMEDIAN JESSIMAE PELUSO

The dispensary is still in the process of licensing and is expected to open soon. “It’s stressful dealing with the idea of being a business owner,” Peluso laughs. She made the transition to smoking marijuana when she moved to California, stating, “I don’t smoke to get high. I smoke to get right.” She continues, “A joint and a bottle of red wine. That’s how I wine and dine myself.” And she considers herself a conservative smoker: “I don’t fuck with dabs. I’m old school. I like flower.” Peluso’s involvement in the cannabis industry was the result of numerous factors: some of her family members were sick, California had just legalized recreational use, and opportunity struck at the right time. “Comedy is my bread and butter,” she explains. “It’s not about the money. People deserve to have a happy, healthy life. Look at the opioid epidemic. If I can help people in recovery, I want to be part of that.” LA Flora Organica opens in June 2018 near USC in South Central Los Angeles. The dispensary will feature all-organic products from esteemed cannabusinesses such as Honey Bear Farms, among others. JESSIMAE.COM @JESSIMAEPELUSO @LAFLORAORGANICA

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E N T E R TA I N M E N T

HAS THE INTERNET MADE PORNOGRAPHY TOO ACCESSIBLE? SCOTT PEARSE

“I can say with absolute certainty that the fantasies I had about rape, homicide and submission were never there before hardcore porn use from [ages] 18-22. When I stayed away from porn for 5 months all those fantasies and urges were gone. My natural sexual taste was vanilla again and still is. Thing with porn is you need harder and harder material, more taboo, more exciting and ‘wrong’ to actually be able to get off.” - Anonymous user on YourBrainOnPorn.com

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his isn’t an experience that reflects a normal relationship with pornography, but in our digital age, stories like this are becoming more common. The Internet has completely revolutionized the way pornography is consumed. New, free content is constantly being uploaded, and the barriers to access—cost, permission, membership—are at all-time lows. Are we able to self-regulate porn consumption? And what are the consequences of this new age of pornography? If pornography often depicts behaviors that many adults do not perceive as mainstream, or even consider enjoyable, why are we viewing these images in private?

BEYOND BLONDE HAIR AND BIG TITS

Gary Wilson, author of Your Brain on Porn: Internet Pornography and the Emerging Science of Addiction, writes, “We’ve all preferred to believe that ‘porn use is normal, so all types of porn use must be harmless.’ Every study so far that has looked at men’s porn use and sexual/relationship satisfaction has found that more porn use correlates with less sexual/relationship satisfaction.” But if porn is straining our relationships, why do we continue to consume it? Psychiatrist Norman Doidge wrote in The Brain That Changes Itself, “When pornographers boast that they are pushing the envelope by introducing new, harder themes, what they don’t say is that they must, because their customers are building up a tolerance to the content.” Researchers call this habituation, and in its more lasting forms, desensitization. In addicts, it’s what drives tolerance, or the need for increased stimulation. Doidge continues: “During the mid- to late 1990s, when the Internet was growing rapidly and pornography was exploding on it, the content of what patients found exciting changed as web sites introduced themes and scripts that altered their brains without their awareness. Because plasticity is competitive, the brain maps for new, exciting images increased at the expense of what had previously attracted them.”

Mike Stabile, Director of Communications at the Free Speech Coalition, the peak industry body representing the adult entertainment world, states, “What has changed is that as a culture we’re much more aware of variations in sexuality and gender than we were twenty years ago. We’re more aware of our own sexualities, and our partner’s sexualities, and we have an easier time talking about sex freely. Truthfully, I think [this] is what scares anti-porn activists the most. The people fighting porn are very often the same people who are fighting against LGBTQ rights, reproductive rights and comprehensive sex ed.” Much of the diversification of pornography in the Internet age has occurred to include entertainment for segments of our community previously ignored by mainstream productions. “During the DVD era,” Stabile notes, “producers wanted to make as generic a production as possible, in order that it might attract the widest audience possible. Often, that meant white women with big blonde hair and large breasts. There wasn’t much room for anyone else. Distributors didn’t want niche titles, and most stores were only willing to stock a handful. Today, niche content dominates the market. Consumers are able to access very specific things they find erotic, and small producers have been able to flourish. We have a better vocabulary for articulating our desires.”

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PORN USE IS NORMAL, SO PORN MUST BE HARMLESS

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


EVERY STUDY SO FAR THAT HAS LOOKED AT MEN’S PORN USE AND SEXUAL/RELATIONSHIP SATISFACTION HAS FOUND THAT MORE PORN USE CORRELATES WITH LESS SEXUAL/ RELATIONSHIP SATISFACTION. – GARY WILSON, AUTHOR OF YOUR BRAIN ON PORN

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ACCESS WITHOUT CONTEXT And though it would seem conversations about what an appropriate relationship with pornography looks like are few and far between, like porn itself, the conversation flourishes online. Gary Wilson from Your Brain on Porn explains: “Many guys are quite open about discussing their porn fetishes anonymously online. These communities normalize the fetishes, but the key point is that these users believe their fetishes are ‘who they really are’ sexually. This is what happens when you spend your adolescence training your sexual arousal to particular porn fetishes. It is that first step that today’s porn users are not warned about—so they don’t see their options. Nor are they told that many users are astonished to see their fetishes fade away after they stop using Internet porn.” Who should take responsibility to prepare young people for unlimited access to adult entertainment? Stabile points the finger at politicians, arguing, “The material we produce isn’t sex ed, any more than The Fast and the Furious is a replacement for Driver’s Ed. It’s called ‘adult entertainment’ for a reason—it’s for adults, and it’s entertainment, not education. We wish that politicians would listen to health educators and researchers to create forward-thinking sex ed programs, rather than succumbing to religious pressure. When people are of age to watch adult material, we want them to have some context for it.”

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LIFESTYLE

SINGER KENDRA FOSTER ON HER COLLABORATIONS AND INTERNATIONAL ADVENTURES SCOTT PEARSE

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hough Kendra Foster has spent the majority of the last decade calling N e w Yo r k C i t y h o m e , it’s difficult to hide the Tallahassee in her voice. “I like to collaborate and get into cahoots with it,” Kendra remarks, accent in full swing, regarding her work with funk and R&B masters George Clinton and D’Angelo. And though many artists would certainly like to be in cahoots with the legendary George Clinton and travel with his Funkadelic all-stars—then be called in for songwriting and vocal duties on D’Angelo’s massive 2014 album, Black Messiah, and win a couple of Grammys—it was Kendra Foster who got the call. “I was a true fan before I was anything else with the Funkadelic and T h e Va n g u a r d ,” K e n d r a emphasizes. “Working with George and D’Angelo was my dream.” As a serial collaborator, Ke n d ra’s p h i l o s o p hy i s simple: “I don’t come into collaboration with an idea of, ‘It has to be like this,’ and ‘I need that’—no, I just want to create. But I have to remind myself, ‘Kendra, they called because you have your own magic. Maybe you didn’t know it until you met George, but this stuff that was coming out of you was actually good.’”

WE SERIOUSLY WERE ON SUCH CRAZY CONQUESTS FOR ACQUIRING REEFER AND MAKING SURE WE HAD IT EVERYWHERE WE WENT... EVERYONE IN THE BAND CALLED US THE FEMALE CHEECH AND CHONG. – SINGER KENDRA FOSTER

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THE ADVENTURES OF INDICA AND MARY JANE GREENLEAF Touring the world with the Parliament-Funkadelic all-stars left plenty of time between shows to find other avenues of creative expression, and as is often the case with artists, art soon began to imitate life. “We seriously were on such crazy conquests for acquiring reefer and making sure we had it everywhere we went,” Kendra recalls. “All over the world.” Kendra and George Clinton’s granddaughter, Shonda ClintonDrennen, lived the outline of a story that became a comic, The Adventures of Indica and MaryJane Greenleaf: “We would have to speak in charades when we didn’t know the language in Scandinavia; we’ve stopped people coming out of phone booths to lead us to the hood in places like Bristol. We’ve jumped out of moving cars in Canada—you name it. Everyone in the band called us the female Cheech and Chong.” But what to do with all this inspiration? “We realized, much in keeping with Baba George’s philosophy, we should become characters,” Kendra notes. To continue the Parliament-Funkadelic flavor, Kendra and Shonda recruited keyboardist and illustrator Danny Bedrosian. “He showed me some illustrations and that was that,” details Kendra. The team is ready to push the project forward, and they continue to live out some of the inspiration for the comic’s storylines while touring.

THE GRAMMY DOUBLE WHAMMY 2014, after over a decade of silence, marked the return of the reclusive D’Angelo. The album, Black Messiah, was a critical and commercial hit. Kendra’s collaboration with D’Angelo as a member of The Vanguard earned her two Grammys: Best R&B song for “Really Love” and Best R&B Album for Black Messiah. Kendra says of the collaboration, “Those people asking me to work with them, that makes me know this, making music—I’m supposed to do this.”

STANDING ON HER OWN Kendra is still hard at work on a forthcoming solo album, as well as working on a number of collaborations with other artists. Her prolific output is best described by Kendra herself: “I know when to indulge in the magic of my dreams.” Those dreams are collaborations with “many amazing artists.” Her single, “Da Da,” is available on Spotify, and a “truly, really far out there” music video is in the works. Kendra’s music is dusted with the driving funk one would expect from someone who toured extensively with Parliament-Funkadelic, but also fizzes with experimentation in vocal lines and melodies fans would recognize as the influence of not just collaborators like D’Angelo, but of other offbeat pop artists such as Erykah Badu or Lauryn Hill.

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And if there’s a secret to Kendra’s ability to create art in so many different arenas, then seamlessly collaborate with true legends of the music industry, it’s the wisdom gleaned from her mentor. “There is something that George says that I think I’m finally starting to understand,” Kendra shares. “He talks about ‘being free from the need to be free.’ I always thought it was something about being passive, but if you can see yourself past the construct that looks like it has you powerless, you will be free simply because you believe you have the power. Once you acknowledge that you’re stronger than the construct, how can it hold you?” If you, like Kendra Foster, believe in the power of dreams, it doesn’t seem like it can.

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SPEAKING VOLUMES ON HIS FIRST RECORD SHWA LAYTART COURTESY OF GREG GORMAN

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ohn Waters is the unequivocal American Artist of the 21st Century. His style and personality is part Little Richard, part vaudeville illusionist. No stranger to performance, Waters has been producing art for over sixty years. His first performances began on a stage in his parents’ living room when he was eight. By the age of twelve, he was a puppeteer. Waters has produced just about every visual art form imaginable, and is best known for cult flicks like Pink Flamingos and Desperate Living to more mainstream films such as Cry-Baby and A Dirty Shame. His film Hairspray was not only a major motion picture success, it was also turned into a hit Broadway musical. But like any great mixed media, multidisciplinary artist, his talents are not limited to one category. Waters has written and directed over fifteen films and acted in over a dozen films and television shows, not including his appearances on late-night TV and in various documentaries. He’s written six books, which he also does the audiobook readings for; one of his most recent novels, Carsick, was (loosely) based on his actual hitchhiking experience while in his sixties. Waters is also an acclaimed photographer and stand-up

comedian who has consistently taken his one-man show across the country. He’s now added a spoken-word vinyl recording to his repertoire. Waters’ first spoken-word vinyl record, Make Trouble, is through Jack White’s Third Man Records. “I met Jack before, and I’m a fan,” Waters notes. “We’ve talked. I think the promoters from my Christmas tour were dealing with him and they asked me if I wanted to do this record, and I love the idea because I thought it was good for my street cred to be on vinyl . . . I love the idea that it will be a collected addition . . . in ‘Perry Como red,’ like my parents had when I was young.” Waters also worked with the world-famous, Grammywinning producer Ian Brennan on the record. They first re-recorded a commencement speech Waters gave to the Rhode Island School of Design’s graduating class of 2015. The rest of the album contains conversations and excerpts with Brennan about Waters’ latest book, Make Trouble. Even though Waters isn’t a fan of hearing his own voice, in 2014 he received a Grammy nomination for best spoken-word album with the audiobook for Carsick.

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I DON’T THINK ANYONE IN SHOW BUSINESS HAS SELF-CONFIDENCE, TO BE HONEST . . . BECAUSE WHY ELSE WOULD THEY GO INTO A FIELD WHERE STRANGERS HAVE TO LIKE US TO MAKE A LIVING? – JOHN WATERS

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Waters starts off Make Trouble by explaining how he was kicked out of his college dormitory due to his first ever scandal involving cannabis. So did that experience scare him away from the wacky-tobaccy? “I have pot for my guests, but I don’t smoke much, as it makes me worry,” he divulges. “Maybe once in a while with my friend, Frankie. On a Friday night we’ll smoke a joint, have a martini and just start ranting and laughing.” He’s obviously not against cannabis, and points out with a giggle, “I had a great time when I was young and had a great time with pot. But now that it’s legal, it’s boring.” One of the themes that stands out in John Waters’ work, and particularly throughout Make Trouble, is his never-ending well of self-confidence, patience and persistence. Throughout his career, Waters has had his share of negativity. So what’s his secret to dealing with adversity and maintaining his confidence? “I don’t think anyone in show business has self-confidence, to be honest,” he remarks. “Because why else would they go into a field where strangers have to like us to make a living? My secret is you have to believe for real what it is you’re saying. Like when I do my show, I am exaggerating and doing it for humor, but basically everything I make fun of I really like.” And that’s why his career has lasted so long. Everything that John Waters likes, we Earthlings seem to like, too.

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E N T E R TA I N M E N T

TOP DAWG CHALLENGING THE STATUS QUO LUNA REYNA

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COURTESY OF GREAT DANE

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fter wandering off on my own to catch TOKiMONSTA’s set at What The Festival 2015, I found my crew at another stage completely enthralled by a face-melting, bassinfused, hip-hop-laden mixture on stage. As if the sound waves hit us all at the same time, my friends and I looked at one another in excitement, moving with the beat, getting closer to the stage to get a better look at the man behind the music. That man was Great Dane, Co-founder of the L.A.based collective of producers and beatmakers known as Team Supreme. Great Dane, aka Dane Morris, challenged himself and Preston James (aka Virtual Boy and one half of Penthouse Penthouse) to make a oneminute beat in one hour using a set BPM and vocal samples from The Notorious B.I.G.’s “Mo Money Mo Problems.” They used the Biggie lyric, “My team supreme, stay clean/triple beam lyrical dream, I be that,” and the name Team Supreme stuck and the first TS members were selected. Their beat-making challenges were released for free online as mixtapes, which proved crucial to the growth and sound of each individual producer in the collective, as well as the growing TS fan base. Eventually the mixes stopped, and each TS member went on to make music and tour solo— until recently.

ONCE YOU PUT YOUR VOICE ON SOMETHING, IT’S KIND OF LIKE OPENING UP YOUR SOUL A LITTLE BIT. The TS crew has brought back their beat sharing experiment, but with a new twist: “Pass The Aux” started in March of last year. Before shows, members of TS allow young, up-andcoming beatmakers to bring tracks of their own to showcase to the audience. “We poke fun at each other, like, ‘Yo, what kinda 808 [drum machine] is that?’” Morris laughs. “Or, ‘What sample pack you usin’, bro?’ Stuff like that. But it’s all in a loving, fun, encouraging way.” But it’s more than giving people an opportunity to share their beats to a crowd. “The cool thing we found out about doing [“Pass The Aux”] is that . . . there are a lot of little music communities that are coming out to the show and then meeting each other in real life. They had no idea their neighbors were doing the same thing they we’re doing, so it’s really cool to connect people to that.”

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The pleasure Morris finds in music and the community is palpable. But Morris wasn’t always a producer. He’s a singer who majored in vocal performance, and up until recently hadn’t merged his beats and voice together. “Putting vocals on things seemed harder to do,” he reveals. “I think mostly it’s just being self-conscious. Once you put your voice on something, it’s kind of like opening up your soul a little bit. It’s a tough balance. You want to be able to express yourself with all the tools you have, and your voice is a huge one. When I saw [my] song “To Stay” take off and do really well, the payoff was insane. It just felt so rewarding to have people that know my lyrics . . . but then again, I just want to do what makes me happy, and making beats makes me really happy.” Outside of his music Morris has been vocal on his social platforms about everything from women’s rights to racism and white privilege. “I have kind of turned into an activist by default,” he explains. “I’m trying to help in every way I can without basically turning my twitter into a political twitter. Riding the line of, ‘Hey here’s my new music,’ but also, ‘Women are people!’” he laughs, adding, “In case [people] didn’t fuckin’ know that.” Coming from a family of strong women—including his mother and grandmother, who were always the head of their households—the degradation of women’s rights doesn’t sit well with Morris, which is why the rape allegations against Gaslamp Killer during the #MeToo campaign hit close to home. Morris has toured with Gaslamp Killer, a fellow electronic musician. “I don’t know him super well,” Morris notes, “but obviously it was definitely the one that hit closest to home of all the [allegation] stories. It’s heartbreaking. It’s been hard for me to even articulate how I feel about it . . . Men need to call each other out and say, ‘That’s not okay,’ in the moment. If they know something about someone, then they need to be the ones to shed a light on it as well.” Artists like Great Dane have been breaking genre-confining boundaries from the jump, introducing the world to new ways of discovering and engaging with music. Expect to hear much more from this powerhouse producer in the years to come. @GRRRREATDANE @GRRRREATDANE @GRRREATDANE

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E N T E R TA I N M E N T

LAS VEGAS’ VERSATILE, POETIC HIP-HOP DUO LISSA TOWNSEND RODGERS

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s soon as rapper Nat the Lioness and bassist CoCo Jenkins began creating music together, Nat found herself asking the question: “In our music, why don’t we not cater to just one audience—why don’t we expand? We can do whatever we feel, but with that hip-hop base.” As Nat & CoCo, the duo has been creating a buzz around Las Vegas with their unique, stripped-down style. Essentially, it’s Nat’s free-flying rhymes and Coco’s cello accompaniment. With verbal acuity and a dark, semi-acoustic sound, it’s a giant step away from the current trends of simple couplet rhymes and elaborate, computer-generated production. Their sound is more likely to evoke comparisons to the RZA or Portishead than Lil Yachty. The project’s fluid nature isn’t a temporary state, but part of an overall plan. “We’re doing this together, with us as the foundation, but the idea is to incorporate different homies across the spectrum of musicianship,” emphasizes CoCo. The pair have invited rappers, beatboxers, producers and even santoor players to add flavor to their sound. Nat feels that Las Vegas offers something to this kind of collaboration that her former home didn’t. “Being from L.A.,” she observes, “people will cut you off, just be into their own clique and not really expand. But out here, people are just more accepting . . . It’s just a different kind of emotional connection.” With CoCo based in Las Vegas and Nat in Los Angeles, the two musicians made their connection via the Internet. “I saw Nat on Cypher Effect,” CoCo recalls. “It was like, ‘Wow, she is fire! Who is that? I don’t know who she is, but her flow is so dope! What she’s rhyming about is dope!’” The pair missed meeting up during a Las Vegas Warped Tour stop—Nat had been on the tour, but didn’t play Vegas; Jenkins had played it a few years earlier—so CoCo looked her up on a later trip to Los Angeles. “I went to L.A. and I thought, ‘Let me hit her up and see if she’s down to link,’” CoCo recalls, “‘and we can chop it up and see if we can work on stuff.’ We kicked it, we vibed, it was good energy and I was like, ‘Yo, come out to Vegas!’”

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So Nat did. “That first weekend that I came out here was our first time ever practicing, rehearsing, doing anything together—and we did a show,” laughs CoCo. “We literally stayed up all night, rehearsed until 3AM. ” Their oneoff was enthusiastically received and turned into an ongoing project, and Nat relocated to Las Vegas. “I knew she was going to be taken care of, the way the community reacted to her,” insists CoCo. While the two grew up far apart, they both came to their love of music early. “All I heard growing up was jazz,” remarks CoCo. “I didn’t hear Earth, Wind & Fire, I didn’t hear Al Green, I didn’t hear any of the standard black music repertoire. But I heard Miles [Davis] and [John] Coltrane and Herbie [Hancock].” She began playing cello at age 11, when her mother accidentally signed her up for orchestra instead of band. She later picked up the conventional six-string bass during high school.

THEIR SOUND IS MORE LIKELY TO EVOKE COMPARISONS TO THE RZA OR PORTISHEAD THAN LIL YACHTY. “I’ve always loved music since I was a small child,” shares Nat, recalling how she and her brother used to record raps in the closet as kids (they were Kriss Kross fans). “I’ve been writing raps for eight years—poetry since I was, like, 13. I’ve been in the church choirs, I was in drama.” But now the duo is looking toward the future. “I feel like we’re just bringing out new things in one another,” notes Nat. “I’m starting to sing and she’s starting to rap, and I don’t really do that.” CoCo agrees: “We’re pushing each other creatively.” They’re also debating whether to come up with a new handle that will be more all-inclusive than just “Nat & CoCo,” and reflect the collaborations they hope to create. “I’m excited and looking forward to playing with everybody,” declares CoCo. “It’s going to be dope.”

@MCAXXEL_FOLEY | @NAT_THE_LIONESS

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@COCOJENKINSBASS | @NATTHELIONESS

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THE ORIGIN OF THE JAZZ CIGARETTE JAKE UITTI

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ve r yo n e’s h e a rd t h e t e r m “ j a z z cigarette” before. It’s a ubiquitous little phrase that, in today’s era, is more comical than anything else. It’s a slang term uttered with a smirk that veils its actual meaning: a joint. The term, coined in the 1920s in jazz clubs and brothels where jazz musicians played, was appropriate in its original use. Jazz artists would use cannabis to bolster their improvisational imaginations and, unlike whiskey or beer, weed allowed them to play long into the night without slowing down.

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That’s the simple history of the term. But the more difficult, in-depth history of the jazz cigarette, which is inseparable from jazz music, marijuana, race and the American legal system, is much murkier and harder to swallow. Around the turn of the twentieth century, New Orleans was one of the most popular, festive and debauched U.S. cities. With ports, sailors, tradesmen and music, the city—which had its own profitable red light district—was a favorite among travelers and cavorters. And “jazz cigarettes” were right in the middle of it all. But with New Orleans’ gallivanting reality came naysayers, of course. Jazz musicians—especially the great ones of the 1920s—were predominantly black. And these black musicians often used marijuana, just as their white counterparts in the clubs and brothels did. Various organizations, caught up in false claims of drug addiction, menacing behavior and outright madness, convinced Americans and those at the top of the government food chain, that marijuana— particularly in the hands of popular, prolific black musicians—was a danger to society.

As a result, swift laws were passed, harsher penalties were cast down, and those who loved jazz cigarettes were in deep danger. But by the mid-1920s, the issue crept outside Louisiana and into the black districts of New York City, specifically Harlem. And as time passed, popularity in jazz cigarettes—and all things marijuana—only increased in nationwide popularity, despite the handful of groups trying to quell its allure. By the 1930s, “reefer songs” and places to smoke called “tea pads” were all the rage among the hip. Weed was beginning to trickle into Europe. Yet all the while, the music culture surrounding cannabis remained under fire. Nevertheless, jazz, its players and the jazz cigarettes they smoked wouldn’t fold. Instead, more marijuana-related music came out, like Cab Calloway’s “Reefer Man” and Benny Goodman’s “Texas Tea Party.” And, in the end, it’s because of these efforts that the term “jazz cigarette” remains popular to this very day, on the tips of the tongues of happy marijuana users and music listeners alike.

JAZZ ARTISTS WOULD USE CANNABIS TO BOLSTER THEIR IMPROVISATIONAL IMAGINATIONS AND, UNLIKE WHISKEY OR BEER, WEED ALLOWED THEM TO PLAY LONG INTO THE NIGHT WITHOUT SLOWING DOWN.

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ebruary is our Entertainment Issue, but it’s also the month in which we celebrate Valentine’s Day—the “holiday” people either dread or adore. Whether you’d like to revel in your singledom or show admiration to the special someone in your life, we’ve got some great gift options for you!

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“MOMMIN’ AINT EASY” BRACELET AND POT LEAF ACCESSORIES BY DEVIANT IMPRESSIONS Deviant Impressions has got something for everyone, but DOPE was particularly excited about highlighting a gift for the Moms out there. If your Mama is of the cannabis-smoking variety, she’s sure to love this Mommin’ Ain’t Easy bracelet. Each bracelet is individually hand-stamped, giving the lettering slight variations in the spacing, depth of impression and alignment, making each bracelet unique. BRACELETS: $15.00 | KEYCHAIN: $10.99 | NECKLACE: $23.00 | RING: $10.99 ETSY.COM/SHOP/DEVIANTIMPRESSIONS @DEVIANTIMPRESSIONS @DEVIANTIMPRESSIONS

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THE FLORIST DRY HERB VAPE PEN + CARRYING CASE BY DANK FUNG If you’re thinking of going a little bigger this V-Day, The Florist is just right. No, not your typical florist—The Florist is a vaporizer pen for dry flowers or kief (not concentrates). Easy to use, sleek and subtle, this is the ideal gift for a cannabis flower lover! $99.99 DANKFUNG.COM @DANKFUNGEXTRACTS @DANKFUNG

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ister Kate is certainly not your typical nun. In fact, most people would not consider her a nun at all, but Sister Kate and the Sisters of The Valley emulate five elements of a traditional convent lifestyle—with their own variations, of course. As is expected in the monastic community, the sisters live together on the property. They wear the same clothes, take a vow of obedience (to the moon cycles), a vow of chastity (which doesn’t require celibacy) and a vow of ecology, which means they must do no harm while making products. It was this very commitment toward ecology that led to

Sister Kate becoming a self-proclaimed nun. Sister Kate started Sisters of The Valley as a company dedicated to erasing the negative stigmas surrounding cannabis while uniting women who believe in the plant’s healing powers. Following the moon cycles, the sisters only manufacture cannabis from the new moon to full moon and hold a ceremony under the stars to bless their work table while giving thanks to Creator God and Mother Goddess for calling them to this profession. As driven activists, the Sisters of The Valley are “on a mission to empower people to heal themselves.” Their array of products reflect

this ethos, including cannabidiol-infused oils, tinctures, salves, gel caps and even a clary sage spray—in case you can’t burn sage on the go! The Sisters continue to ordain new nuns into their order in hopes of changing perceptions about the healing power of cannabis and the importance of respecting “the breadth and depth of the gifts of Mother Earth,” shares Kate. SISTERSOFCBD.COM @SISTERSOFTHEVALLEY @SISTERSOFTHEVALLEY

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LAS VEGAS: NO ORDINARY CITY

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JONAH TACOMA

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he flight from Seattle to Las Vegas, N ev a d a , w a s a s h o r t o n e ; I h a d made the trip over a dozen times in the last year, but one was standing out in my head above the others. Vegas had become something of a mecca for cannabis trade shows, and there seemed to be a new industry event popping up in Sin City every other month. In spite of its apparent liberal leanings, Nevada’s approach to cannabis had been notoriously conservative in the past. Possessing even a tenth of a gram would catch you a felony in the state until November of 2000 when medical use for chronically ill patients was approved, setting the groundwork for full recreational adult use on January 1, 2017.

I came here for funding three years ago w h e n my ow n c a n n a b i s b u s i n e s s w a s beginning to take off. I had started a lifestyle brand based around the dabbing scene that was coming online in 2012; the medical market was already in full swing on the West Coast and starting to produce its own cannabis rockstars. I jokingly dubbed them Dabstars and began posting mugshot-style photos with small biographies for captions to our social media. Before I knew it, we were touring the country and reaching millions of cannabis enthusiasts each week. The plane screeched to a landing at McCarran International airport, jolting me from my thoughts. Duane Woods and Nick Woodward of Ekho Solutions greeted me at the terminal. They had started as liquor reps for Jesse James Bourbon, and we’d spent some wild times on the road together in the past.

The boys lit up a pair of oversized joints and began passing them around the car. I grimaced as we passed the Wynn. It was here that I met our New York investors for the first time. They had flown me out in style, picking me up in a limousine and renting the top floor of the luxury hotel. An attempt at shock and awe, which had admittedly worked on this small town boy from the mountains of Colorado. What followed was an unparalleled weekend of drugs and debauchery not fit for print in any magazine worth its ink. Suffice it to say, I nearly lost everything that trip and ended up rohypnoled and broke with a $10,000 hospital bill for my troubles. The whole thing had left me with a kind of Vegas PTSD that still had not worn off in the years since... A client scored us a suite at Treasure Island and we headed up to cover the smoke detectors for a quick dab sesh before heading

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THE MIXED LEGAL ENVIRONMENT MAKES IT TRICKY FOR UPAND-COMING BRANDS LOOKING TO BRANCH OUT OF THEIR HOME STATES AND ONTO THE NATIONAL SCENE.

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out into the streets. This was a work trip, but you wouldn’t know it from the look of us. Cannabis was not for the Harvard MBA—these were normal, red-blooded Americans who saw cannabis as their last real chance at the American dream. The federal government had allowed the cannabis industry to flourish under the Obama administration, even enacting federal protections for states with cannabis laws on the books. These protections would later be altered by Trump-appointed Attorney General Jeff Sessions, further muddying the waters. The mixed legal environment makes it tricky for up-and-coming brands looking to branch out of their home states and onto the national scene. Federal laws still prohibit and harshly punish interstate trafficking, ultimately reducing the industry to regional factions, with each legal state boasting a handful of breakout brands. Nevada was a new slice in the pie and many of these brands now found themselves in Las Vegas, entrenched in backdoor negotiations with those lucky enough to have scored a license to produce in the state. Vegas itself is no ordinary city. Annual revenue here exceeded 25 billion dollars in 2016, catering to a staggering 40 million tourists each year. For an up-and-coming cannabis brand looking to be the next Coke or Pepsi, Vegas is a chance to expose their product to a national market.

Founded in 1905 from the deserts of what once was Mexico, Las Vegas sprang to life as a small water stop on the trade routes from Mexico to California. It was not until 1931—when construction began on the Hoover Dam, thus quadrupling the population in Las Vegas proper—the true makings of a city would emerge. Recognizing the potential to cash in, Nevada legislators reversed their previously conservative stances, passing a bill to legalize gambling that same year and giving birth to the Vegas we know today. Here we were, decades later, and Nevada is cashing in again, clearing a cool 3.7 million in revenue during the first month of recreational cannabis sales. This nearly doubles Colorado’s first month of revenue, while covering a population gap of more than 3.5 million people and an insatiable tourist market. I woke up early day two, shaking off the previous night’s festivities in the oversized, cascade-style shower, the endless supply of hot water slowly bringing me back to life. Hailing a cab I arrived at Essence, one of the dozen or so dispensaries now licensed in the area. A small sign split the line into medical and recreational customers and I took my place behind a group of tourists buying legal cannabis for their first time. Smiling, I spotted a few standouts in the display case. Vegas had its share of homegrown cannabis brands, but I was surprised to see some familiar West Coast brands alongside the locals. Fo r t h e f o r w a r d - t h i n k i n g c a n n a b i s entrepreneur, the map was beginning to look a lot like a chess board, and Vegas was beginning to look like the golden goose—a chance to reach a broader market in an industry wracked with growing pains and stifled by regional restrictions. W h a t eve r t h e f u t u r e wo u l d b e , t h e momentum seems unstoppable: Cannabis is here to stay, and (for now) the people who made it possible still have a stake in the game. This was always an industry of believers, and as I took once more for the skies towards Seattle, I was proud to count myself among them. Next stop, Hawaii... DABSTARS.COM @JONAH_TACOMA

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2017 DOPE INDUSTRY AWARDS WASHINGTON

2017 DOPE INDUSTY AWARDS WASHINGTON ORHUN UYGU

T

he biggest night in the Washington Cannabis Industr y was once again celebrated as the D O P E I n d u s t r y Aw a r d s (DIA’s) went down for the fifth consecutive year. The December tradition was held at a brand new venue; the Seattle Design Center, that wowed guests with its dramatic backdrop setting the stage for the “Oscars of the Cannabis Industry.” A 100 foot red carpet, hosted by Kitty Kitty Bang Bang, greeted guests as they arrived. Once seated nominees were treated to goodie bags stuffed with great gifts from sponsors and DOPE Magazine. The show kicked off with a rousing monologue from the evening’s MC Mikey McClarron from Craving Amazing and vibes were in full swing with live music from the band Roman and the Whereabouts. Highlights of the nights included a new Trail Blazer award that was given to Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes who graciously accepted it from DOPE Magazine’s co-founder David Tran. The Male Budtender of the Year award was presented by the mother and family of deceased budtender Cameron Smith who received a standing ovation from the audience, many of whom came together to support Cameron’s family after Cameron’s untimely death. The award was renamed the “Cameron Smith Award” in honor of his impact on his community and cannabis customers. The night would not have been possible without the support of the amazing sponsors. The Presenting Sponsor, Ionic, brought its full branding power with two amazing ice sculptures that adorned the entry and mezzanine. The bar sponsor, Shop CBD Now created a collection of incredible CBD cocktails that allowed guests to imbibe in wellness. Supporting sponsors included Filter420, Mammoth Labs, Hollyweed North, Pearl2o, Tokem Cannabis and Gaga Extracts & Edibles all contributed amazing gifts for guests to enjoy.


2017 DOPE INDUSTRY AWARDS WASHINGTON

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BEST TOPICAL/SUBLINGUAL COMPANY Fair winds

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ACTIVIST OF THE YEAR Jedidiah Haney

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STORE

BUDDY’S IN RENTON FOR THE MUSICIAN IN ALL OF US MILES SINCLAIR TINA BALLEW

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420 SUNSET BLVD N RENTON, WA 98057 (425) 226-9333 HOURS: SUN-THUR: 9AM-10PM HOURS: FRI-SAT: 9AM-11PM @BUDDYSRECREATIONAL BUDDYS-WA.COM

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


. . . MYLES WANTED THE PLACE TO FEEL LIKE THE PROHIBITIONERA NIGHTCLUBS AND SPEAKEASIES BUDDY, HIS GRANDFATHER, WOULD HAVE PLAYED IN.

B

uddy’s Pot Shop in Renton is a living, breathing, cannabisinfused tribute to music and its relationship to our favorite mind-altering plant. Walk in and you’re visually transported in time to a Prohibition-era speakeasy, where you can peruse the latest in cannabis extracts, edibles and high-grade flower while local musicians jam in the middle of the store.

THE PEOPLE Owner Myles Harlow Kahn, a musician and former entertainment lawyer, named the business after his grandfather, Buddy Harlowe, a famous Prohibition-era jazz bassist and bandleader of the iconic Latin Quarter nightclub in New York. But beyond its namesake, Buddy’s is a celebration of music in all styles and genres, embodying the diversity and sense of community prevalent in both the music and cannabis world.

THE PLACE Dim lighting, curved display cases, shiny tin art deco ceiling tiles— Myles wanted the place to feel like the Prohibition-era nightclubs and speakeasies Buddy himself would have played in. There’s always a great mix of music in the background, and on Fridays from 4:00-7:00 p.m. local musicians play live shows right in the store. Next door is Buddy’s Goodies and Glass, the other half of their operation, where you can buy local glass (yes, they make a point to source almost all of their glass from the Pacific Northwest), incense, hemp-derived CBD products, books and more.

THE PRODUCT “We’re focused on providing the broadest selection at the best price point,” states Myles. “All cannabis consumers are not created equal.” They carry an impressive array of over 40 flower growers and an outstanding selection of edibles, concentrates and medically-endorsed products for patients. And Buddy’s is all about offering high-end flower by companies like House of Cultivar and Khush Kush, as well as their own white-label house brand. Budtenders often tour facilities like House of Cultivar’s genetics lab for that first-hand knowledge and education that’s so important to customers.

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PROCESSOR

MR WHOLESALE GETS A REBOOT MEET MR 2.0 MILES SINCLAIR EMILY NICHOLS

M

R Wholesale has recently gone through a major overhaul. Their new lab director “turned the place upside down,” as Owner Rebecca Chateaubriand puts it, and reinvented their entire process to improve quality and efficiency. The change was so radical that Rebecca now refers to the brand as “MR 2.0.” (“MR,” by the way, stands for Made Right.)

THE PEOPLE Rebecca has a background in classical French cooking and learned candy-making from her grandmother. She’s also a professional singer, and, to protect her vocal cords, chooses not to smoke. All of this was the perfect recipe for going into business making low-dose, infused candies. Getting to where she is now has involved some hiccups, but in the summer of 2017, everything fell into place when Rebecca promoted her Extraction Tech, Chris Topper (a.k.a. Topper) to Lab Director. A military veteran with a medical and biochemical background, Topper was more than qualified for the job, and engineered their complete system overhaul. Now, their team of 25 is putting out a better product with more efficiency and greater vision for the future than ever before.

THE PLACE While Made Right grows some of their own flower for extracts, and sometimes sells the nicest buds to a handful of stores, the heart of the operation is their extraction lab and kitchen, where the candymaking magic happens. Inside, it’s pristine and clean, with people in hair nets and gloves bustling about in a methodical, musical, mélange of activity. You’ll see “grammers” weighing and packaging product with hip-hop playing in the background. Then there’s the extraction lab, where techs wear full-on scrubs to prevent cross-contamination. They’re more along the Megadeth and Sevenfold vein. “We go hard in the lab,” shares Topper, who admits he sometimes listens to classical music when working alone.

THE PRODUCT Made Right’s main product is their distillate-infused candy line, Chill Pillz. At the time of this writing, they contain 5mg THC—half the maximum allowed dosage per serving in Washington state. This is great for newcomers with a low tolerance, but also for experienced users interested in microdosing. Rebecca, Topper and the Made Right team are confident they’re putting out the best distillate-infused candies in the state at a competitive price, thanks to their reformulation and bottom-up restructuring.

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MRWHOLESALEWASHINGTON.COM

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INSIDE, IT’S PRISTINE AND CLEAN, WITH PEOPLE IN HAIR NETS AND GLOVES BUSTLING ABOUT IN A METHODICAL, MUSICAL, MÉLANGE OF ACTIVITY.

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C U LT U R E

LARPING WITH LORD TREVENANT P. GOTTI

92

JAY SCHOBER

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


I WAS ONCE AN ADVENTURER… The Wizard stands tall, like a Queen on a chessboard. Spears, swords, bows and shields surround him in a protective shell. He flips open a leathery tome and readies himself to speak in the Elven tongue. A game warden announces the battle’s beginning, and archers on both sides release salvos. A foam-tipped arrow immediately strikes Lord Trevenant in the face, knocking him to the ground. A solemn voice cries out, “Our Wizard has fallen!” Lord Trevenant, flustered, hops to his feet and yips, “Half-draw! You can only shoot bows at half-draw!” From the other army a voice responds, “That was halfdraw, Trent! And I’m 30 feet from you!” Moments pass

and the field collects with fallen warriors, now out for the round. Trevenant and his battalion are finally defeated. This is Dargarth, a blend of two Maryland-based battle games, freestanding with its own lore, heroes and legends. Lord Trevenant hopes to one day be included in that history. Washington state classifies Trent as an ordinary, 180 pound, 6’2” organ donor. On the battlefield, however, Lord Trevenant cuts a fearsome silhouette under his Wizard’s hat. His death by an arrow to the face in battle will resonate in his mind for the next week. During his normal life, Trent makes tacos at a popular lunch spot. He pays rent and takes care of two dogs he brought with him from Texas three years ago when his girlfriend, now fiancée, accepted a job offer with Amazon.

TRENT’S SIGNATURE WIZARD HAT WAS STITCHED UNDER THE GUIDANCE OF A MASTER SEAMSTRESS; HIS SCEPTER IS ONE OF A KIND, CRAFTED BY AN UPAND-COMING BLACKSMITH . . .

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LORD TREVENANT AND HIS MERRY HOBBYISTS Live Action Role-Playing (LARP) games thrive in the Pacific Northwest’s buzzing geek community. Games mainly differ in theme, combat intensity and stor y immersion. Seattle’s Vampire LARP, for example, simulates combat by dice and hides from public notice, like a traditional vampire community would. Medieval LARP’s popularity peaked in the first decade of the 2000s with attention from viral videos and movies like Role Models. LARP is fun—and even silly—but hobbyists and organizers, not just fighters, define the experience. Costumers, musicians, storytellers, leaders and warriors unite to weave stories of fantasy and adventure. The community helps players like Trent develop their craft. As Sir Raven, Captain of the Malori explains, “Whether it’s fighting with spears and swords, writing poetry, spinning yarn, or even learning how to lead and work with others, Dargarth is a safe place to try new things.” Trent’s signature Wizard hat was stitched under the guidance of a master seamstress; his scepter is one of a kind, crafted by an up-and-coming Blacksmith; his spells are hand-written, and he practices orating the winding incantations so the whole battlefield hears him boom. Lord Trevenant is a community project, and Trent’s character development enhances the game for all.

A CALL TO ARMS

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Eating with a friend at World Pizza in Seattle’s International District, an employee overheard us talking about LARP. He excitedly introduced himself and proclaimed his own in-game title. He discovered Dargarth in Summer 2017 during a walk through Volunteer Park (where they fight every other Sunday) and has attended every session since. Speaking with Duke Arminius of Narscin, a distinguished Dargarth nobleman, I learned that the most common reason for joining LARP is love at first sight. The Duke spoke in earnest. I recall finding the game as a child myself. I bewildered my neighborhood playmates by ditching basketball to go join a bunch of strangers fighting with foam swords, dying exaggeratedly like a Shakespearian actor. When you see LARP for the first time, you know if it was made for you. You can find Dargarth battles in the Shadow of the Asian Art Museum here in Seattle every other Sunday.

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


THIS PRODUCT CONTAINS MARIJUANA. THIS PRODUCT HAS INTOXICATING EFFECTS AND MAY BE HABIT FORMING. SMOKING IS HAZARDOUS TO YOUR HEALTH. THERE MAY BE HEALTH RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH CONSUMPTION OF THIS PRODUCT. THIS PRODUCT SHOULD NOT BE USED BY WOMEN THAT ARE PREGNANT OR BREAST FEEDING. FOR USE ONLY BY ADULTS TWENTY-ONE AND OLDER. KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN. MARIJUANA CAN IMPAIR CONCENTRATION, COORDINATION, AND JUDGEMENT. DO NOT OPERATE A VEHICLE OR MACHINERY UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF THIS DRUG. THIS PRODUCT MAY BE UNLAWFUL OUTSIDE OF WASHINGTON STATE.


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C U LT U R E

HOLLYWOOD IS OVERDUE FOR A LOW-BUDGET REVOLUTION JEFFREY RINDSKOPF

H

98

ollywood’s Golden Age was over by the early ‘60s. Facing increased competition from the advent of television, major studios struggled to attract younger generations by spending more money on fewer releases made with expensive new technologies—a strategy that produced masterpieces like Lawrence of Arabia and misfires like Cleopatra, whose failure nearly bankrupted 20th Century Fox. Major studios survived because they got desperate and tried something crazy—emulating subversive, youth-oriented hits like Bonnie and Clyde and The Graduate. They empowered young directors like Spielberg, Coppola, Lucas and Scorsese to make more mid-budget movies with little of the studio oversight that characterized Old Hollywood. Studios are, after all, just companies, and all companies need to adapt their business models every now and then to stay relevant in an ever-changing market. In many ways, the bloated studio system of 2017 doesn’t look all that different than it did in 1963. Facing increased competition from the advent of online streaming services, they struggle to attract younger generations by spending more money on fewer releases made with expensive new technologies—just replace the biblical epics with superhero sequels, and Cinemascope with 3D and IMAX.

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


In the wake of a 15-year decline in ticket sales and its worst summer in more than a decade, I think Hollywood is overdue for another upheaval of its old ways. But this is business—who cares what I think. What do the numbers say? Glancing at some of the biggest box office earners of 2017, it’s clear the years to come will feature no shortage of comic book films (Wonder Woman), animated sequels (Despicable Me 3) and Disney’s liveaction remakes of animated relics (Beauty and the Beast). Though sequels certainly won’t go away, studios may learn to thin the herd as more lackluster franchise entries with bad wordof-mouth (Transformers: The Last Knight, The Mummy) fail to earn enough to justify their exorbitant budgets. The cinematic universe trend sparked by Marvel’s The Avengers seems to finally be on the decline after reaching its CGI sky-beam climax in 2017, as evidenced by Universal scrapping their Dark Universe and DC shifting focus to more standalone superhero stories.

But the most interesting films among 2017’s big box office earners are the outliers. I’m thinking specifically of It (#5), Get Out (#14), and Split (#21), according to Box Office Mojo,—all relatively low-budget non-sequels in the horror genre, which has a long history of movies earning disproportionate sums on small budgets. Combined with the success of similarly original mid-budget films like Dunkirk, Baby Driver and Girls Trip, there’s clear evidence that Hollywood could regain some of its old market share by investing in more modestlybudgeted genre films, enabling less studio oversight, bigger returns on investment—and maybe even lower ticket prices. While it may be optimistic to predict a genre renaissance or another ‘70s-style age-of-theauteur on the horizon, Hollywood will have to reckon with its changed place in the digital age eventually, in one way or another. The question is, are they desperate enough to try something crazy?

IN THE WAKE OF A 15-YEAR DECLINE IN TICKET SALES AND ITS WORST SUMMER IN MORE THAN A DECADE, I THINK HOLLYWOOD IS OVERDUE FOR ANOTHER UPHEAVAL OF ITS OLD WAYS.

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E N T E R TA I N M E N T

THE BUSKERS OF PIKE PLACE MARKET MILES SINCLAIR

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TINA BALLEW

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


N

othing makes a city feel more alive than the music of buskers bouncing off walls, echoing down alleyways. Last December I traveled to Seattle’s Pike Place Market to talk with buskers and get their stories. I first ran into pianist and songwriter Jonny Hahn, who’s been playing piano on the corner of Pike and Pine for thirty years. As I approached, his music was playful yet intense, his head held high as he sang, hands and feet working the piano, and he somehow played flawlessly with gloves on! Between songs, he told me about himself and the busking life. DOPE Magazine: Most of your songs are very political. How does the public react to you and your message? JONNY: I get the full range of responses. Some laugh, some get pissed, some don’t even notice. One time, during the Bush administration, a guy rushed up; he was furious. He shoved my tip jar to the ground and ripped my signs down because the political message pissed him off so much. People need to realize that art in public places is invaluable. It’s a boon to cultural consciousness. Out here, just expressing yourself is a political act. It speaks to free-spiritedness and the democratization of culture.

OUT HERE, JUST EXPRESSING YOURSELF IS A POLITICAL ACT. IT SPEAKS TO FREE-SPIRITEDNESS AND THE DEMOCRATIZATION OF CULTURE. – PIANIST AND SONGWRITER JONNY HAHN

You’ve been doing this a while. How has busking changed over the years? Where to start? One big change is the digital revolution has had a major impact on busking. With streaming and MP3s, CD sales have plummeted, which was the heart of my business. Making money from tips was never my main source of income, and now, even that is dropping off. People will take pictures and sometimes even videos but not throw a tip in the jar. So business has gotten tougher. I’m not out here to be the starving artist. I’m here to make a living.

Your lyrics are so intense and thought out. What’s your creative process for songwriting? It starts with a kernel of an idea, like a subject of interest or a concept. It percolates in my mind for a while. Eventually, I’ll sit down, turn off the phone, and play with ideas both lyrically and musically until something starts to gel. It can take a long time. It can take five years for a song to come together, but there’s no rush. It’s like this guy who strapped a bunch of helium balloons to a lawn chair back in the 1980s—have you heard this story? He had this crazy idea for twenty years, and then finally it came together, and he was sixteen thousand feet in the air. It’s like that. Things percolate.

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The crowd ebbed and flowed, so I let Jonny get back to work. I wandered through the market until I spotted Faith Grossnicklaus playing violin between Pike Place Flowers and Left Bank Books. She wore an overcoat, high heels and a yellow rose in her pin-curled hair. She looked like she’d just stepped off a train in the 1920s. Faith recently moved to Seattle from Creswell, Oregon, where she learned to play violin at the age of seven. She grew up attending the Oregon Country Fair, and as soon as she could play a tune, her father encouraged her to take her fiddle there and play for the crowd. She’s been busking ever since. DOPE: What’s a day in the life as a Pike Place busker? FAITH: It starts the night before, with setting my pin curls. Then in the morning, wake up, makeup and hair, and get myself to the market by 10:45 so I’m ready to go for an 11:00 set. In those fifteen minutes I choose a flower for my hair from Pike Place Flowers, grab a yerba mate from The Creamery, head to the bathroom to make any last adjustments and put on my high heels, leaving just enough time to wander back out to the market and find my pitch [busking location]. I aim to do two to four sets before 5pm to make it a solid work day. Do you make a living at this, or is it more of a side-gig? Busking has been my full-time job for the past four or five years. It’s completely possible, but as with anything, it takes a lot of hard work and strategy. Since last summer, I’ve been trying to make it more of a side-gig to my business, Bone China Designs. When I’m not busking or touring with my band, Roselit Bone, I’m making wearable, porcelain, bone-inspired creations. I just got my business license a few months ago and that’s where I’ve been putting most of my energy lately. What’s the strangest or most surprising thing that’s ever happened to you while busking?

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That’s a hard one. When you put yourself out in public, ANYTHING can happen. Whether that’s meeting Nick Cave at a farmers market in Edinburgh, Scotland, or realizing that the guy who’s been ‘looking for change in his pocket for too long’ is, in fact, not looking for change and has been touching himself while watching you play. That weirdness aside, I’m always surprised by the wide array of people who will tip a busker, how many people know Irish step dancing, and how many people want to tell a complete stranger with a violin their entire life story. You never know what’s going to happen when you’re playing in public.

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INTERVIEW

SUNSQUABI’S KEVIN H CONDUCTOR OF THE SQUABTRAIN MELISSA JOY

COURTESY OF SUNSQUABI

DON U

Kevin Donohue: Smoking weed and making music have gone together since music was created in our society. For me, smoking isn't the source of inspiration, but rather opens up a window to things you might not have seen, heard or thought of otherwise. It breaks down the walls of possibility and tells that voice in your head saying, "No, you can't do that," to fuck off, and encourages the voice saying, "Shit, it's art. Do whatever feels good." You’ve been touring like crazy and visiting all kinds of major cities. Do you think cannabis has anything to do with what makes the local music scene in Colorado so special? I think the best aspect of smoking marijuana is the fact that everyone who does it likes to share. I think the marijuana industry has helped in the last few years, in sort of giving artists a common ground. Not everybody smokes, though. Where do you get your herb from these days? Any particular strains or dispensaries you’re fond of? Currently my favorites are the Space Queen, Cheese and Flo from the Denver Kush Club. My all-time favorite is the AK Cherry Lime. It’s a strain I've only found here in Colorado . . . It's incredible how many kinds there are now. The more the better. Tell me a little bit about how you learned to write and compose.

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Writing songs really came at an early age, even before I learned to read music. I had a little 49-key keyboard that I would just bang on all day . . . I had a very great teacher in high school that really pushed me in discovering my talents—even though the bass player and I from [the school] jazz band would totally show up at his class at 7:30 in the morning having just wake n’ baked!

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M

O

DOPE Magazine: Would you say that cannabis has an effect on your creative process?

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f you live in Denver or Boulder and haven’t heard of SunSquabi, then you should probably work on broadening both your social and musical circles. This funky trio is made up of bassist Josh Fairman, drummer Chris Anderson and electronica wizard/ guitar frontman Kevin Donohue. 2017 alone included a Red Rocks performance with Papadosio, a fall tour with Sound Tribe Sector 9 and a sold-out headlining show at the Fillmore Auditorium. The group is known for their appreciation and affiliation with cannabis, so we asked Colorado native Donohue some questions about his relationship with cannabis.


CANNABIS BREAKS DOWN THE WALLS OF POSSIBILITY AND TELLS THAT VOICE IN YOUR HEAD SAYING, ‘NO, YOU CAN'T DO THAT,’ TO FUCK OFF, AND ENCOURAGES THE VOICE SAYING, ‘SHIT, IT'S ART. DO WHATEVER FEELS GOOD.' – KEVIN DONOHUE, SUNSQUABI FRONTMAN

What’s the best part of living in a state where weed is legal? Nobody is going to jail anymore, or afraid of confrontation with the police over something as simple and harmless as smoking a doobie or sharing some weed with your friends. It's created a much safer environment here and taken an entire aspect of illegal drug imports out of our communities, contrary to what people who have opposed legalization for years have tried to tell us. Everyone is pretty friendly here, as you can imagine. Do you think there’s a correlation or relationship between music and marijuana? I'm pretty sure that even all the way back to ancient Egyptian and African times, humanity has always been rollin’ up fat papyrus blunts and having jam sessions. Music is an incredible tool to connect people and share a feeling without saying anything, and marijuana can sort of have that same role in our society, if we let it.

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SUNSQUABI.COM @SUNSQUABI @SUNSQUABI @SUNSQUABI


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T

hunderpussy is just a band—for now. When I spoke with three of the all-female rock group’s four members over happy hour in December 2017, they were still fresh from signing a multi-album deal with Stardog Records, eagerly anticipating all the creative ways they might use the newfound resources to grow their following. “We have this whole idea of Thunderpussy being like a lifestyle brand,” notes bassist Leah Julius. And chief among the products they envision within that brand? A Thunderpussyapproved pot strain. The Seattle-based band has been associated with legal weed ever since singer Molly Sides was featured on the cover of The Stranger’s first “Green Guide,” which in turn led to them becoming brand ambassadors for JUJU Joints. When recording their as-yet-unreleased debut album at a church basement in Ashland, Oregon, last fall, they had no shortage of hand-rolled blunts to aid their creative process. This might come as a surprise to those who know Thunderpussy through their unforgettable live per formances, which they admit have more of a “drinking vibe.” That’s only because Thunderpussy is, quite simply, a killer bar band with no reservations about engaging in largerthan-life onstage antics, which can put even the cockiest of ‘70s cock-rockers to shame. “I haven’t been naked onstage in almost

two years now,” muses guitarist Whitney Petty. “Weed shouldn’t be illegal, and While singer Molly Sides shows off her flexibility n e i t h e r s h o u l d T h u n d e r p u s s y,” and dance chops as frontwoman, Whitney declares Molly. When discussing is often the wild card onstage, sometimes those offended by a band name that brandishing a whip or wearing only a fur jock simply references female genitalia, strap with a racoon tail called “The Duke.” The Whitney aptly deploys a Big Lebowski band’s old practice space even neighbored quote: “The word itself makes some a sex shop, where they often stopped in for men uncomfortable. Vagina.” unconventional stage supplies. As passionate as they But while Thunderpussy’s fearlessness are advocating for legal has helped them become something cannabis, the band of a Seattle phenomenon in just members take even more t h re e ye a r s , t h e i r c h o i c e o f pride in seeing themselves name ran afoul of the federal and their rising success as part P a t e n t a n d Tr a d e m a r k of a sea of change for female Office, which has so far representation in the entertainment denied their trademark industry and beyond. “When a mother request for being and her daughter come up to you after potentially “immoral” a show and say something like, ‘You and “scandalous”— changed my life,’ or, ‘My daughter wants regardless of how to be in a band because of you,’” remarks many other federallyMolly, “those are the moments I get a little licensed trademarks teary-eyed.” employ the word Female representation is also a big part “pussy.” of why they signed to Stardog in the first place. After three years perfecting the songs for their first album, they were determined to find the right distributor to get it to as many people possible, yet were still cautious about signing onto any label they perceived as nothing more than “suited men, saying ‘here’s how we see your music.’” They were on track to release the album themselves until earlier this year, when they toured Stardog’s offices in New York and found them full of “badass women we could relate to, in powerful positions.” Fo l l ow i n g s o m e r i g o ro u s c o n t ra c t negotiations, the band has finally signed on the dotted line, and even released a single, “Speed Queen,” in the ramp-up to their major label debut. We’ll see how Thunderpussy—the band and the brand—grows from there. THUNDERPUSSYUSA.COM @THUNDERPUSSY @THUNDERPUSSY @THUNDERPUSSIEZ

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BUSINESS

THE CHALLENGES OF GETTING PRODUCT FROM POINT A TO POINT B KELLY VO

W

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ould you transpor t hundreds of thousands of dollars to the bank using your commuter car? Who would be crazy enough to risk that much money? Unfortunately, this is the dilemma faced by many businesses in the marijuana industry. At more than $200 an ounce, transporting a single pound of marijuana between a grow and a dispensary can be a big risk—both financially and professionally. There’s just one problem: there are few options available for safe transport. Tra d i t i o n a l c o u r i e r s e r v i c e s a re o u t . Marijuana companies can’t use UPS or FedEx to ship their product either. They also can’t get their product delivered in semi-trucks like a grocery store would. Instead, they must figure out their own transportation logistics, which have to follow state distribution licensing requirements. This can create a huge bottleneck, in which cannabis gets stuck at the grower because there are not enough legal transportation options. This is what happened in Nevada when recreational marijuana first went online. According to the state, liquor distributors had an 18-month exclusive right to distribute recreational marijuana. Unfortunately, there

were not enough distributors to serve the state and, barely a week after going live, dispensaries in Nevada struggled to get the product they desperately needed. So what’s the solution? Small, independent transport companies. In Colorado, Washington, Oregon and California, cannabis transportation companies are popping up with increasing frequency to meet the demands of the industry. Not only does cannabis require a safe and effective way to transport product, but being a mostly cash-only business, there’s a big market for money transportation as well. Using cargo vans, armored trucks and highly-trained drivers, these companies are safely transporting cannabis—and cash—on the road. O n e e xa m p l e o f s u c h a c o m p a ny i s HARDCAR Next Generation Security. “Our service is integral to this space,” states Kelli Vowels, their Operations Manager. “ We provide safe, discreet transport of not only cannabis and cannabis product, but of the cash that goes along with it. We are a veteranowned and operated company, so not only do we provide armored vehicles, we provide mission-oriented armed drivers to ensure the goods arrive safely and without incident.”

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


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AT MORE THAN $200 AN OUNCE, TRANSPORTING A SINGLE POUND OF MARIJUANA BETWEEN A GROW AND A DISPENSARY CAN BE A BIG RISK—BOTH FINANCIALLY AND PROFESSIONALLY.

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This mix of transportation and security is key to the success of cannabis distribution. As a federally illegal substance, there can be serious ramifications if and when product is stolen—putting the grower, dispensary and their employees at risk. In addition, as a fledgling industry, all eyes are focused on its safety and efficacy, so ensuring legal product doesn’t end up in the illegal market is paramount. That’s why HARDCAR and other similar companies use armored vehicles to decrease vulnerability to theft. HARDCAR even takes things a step further: “A real-time tracking app ensures that businesses know the exact location of their agent and their armored vehicle through each part of the secure route,” explains Vowels. HARDCAR also only hires drivers and security officers with a history of serving in a similar capacity. Their workforce is made up of veterans and former law enforcement officers who have been recognized and valued for their training and experience. Despite the necessity of independent cannabis transportation companies, like everything else in the marijuana industry, there have been some roadblocks on the way to success. For example, HARDCAR had a difficult time getting insurance when they first started; other companies have struggled to gain loans to purchase additional vehicles. For Vowels, “ The biggest hurdles for everyone in the cannabis industry are state versus federal laws, and maintaining 100 percent compliance to avoid any potential issues. HARDCAR is 100 percent compliant, fully bonded and insured. We began that way from the start and we will maintain this integrity going forward.” Currently, HARDCAR Security has twenty employees and multiple trucks, but that’s nowhere near what will be required for C a l i f o r n i a’s n e w r e c r e a t i o n a l m a r ke t . Business analysts estimate that introducing recreational cannabis in the Golden State will bump the marijuana industry by ten percent, worth $2.64 billion.

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UDDERLY BADASS ROB MORRISON’S “SELF PORTRAIT #1” WIND HOME

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n outstanding artist in many mediums, Rob Morrison created this piece as a reflection of himself, titling it “Self Portrait #1.” The piece was made in October 2017 and is the first of his rapidly growing selfportrait series. Rob’s inspiration to start this project was the desire to make a more personal series that reflected his own life. Rob, although ablebodied, suffers from serious chronic pain. I’m certain some days he feels a walker would make it easier to get around. The walker, by the way, was added after the cow portion of the piece was finished—it didn’t stand correctly, and he needed to find a way to sturdy it up a bit. This piece is currently available for purchase, along with several other self-portraits from the series. Contact Rob via Instagram (@ rmorrisonglass) for more info. His glass can be purchased both retail and wholesale, and select pieces were recently shown in Las Vegas at the American Glass Expo in January.

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@RMORRISONGLASS

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M



E N T E R TA I N M E N T

RAPPER SOL ON GENTRIFICATION, ADVOCACY AND HIS NEW MUSIC LUNA REYNA JASON TRAN

H

ip-hop music has always been a socially-, politicallyand culturally-driven art form, from Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five’s “The Message” to Public Enemy and Kendrick Lamar. Sol, a Seattle-born rapper, has taken the substance of his predecessors and blended it with his influences, including His Royal Badness, Prince. “Prince’s unapologetic identity helped form me even simply as a biracial kid growing up in America,” he told us. Sol’s unique Seattle upbringing has helped him create uplifting, thought-provoking music for the better part of the last seven years. He has collaborated with the likes of Macklemore and Blue Scholars; he’s opened and toured with everyone from Zion I to Lauryn Hill. Sol’s upbringing in the Emerald City helped mold him into the artist he is today, so the future of the city remains at the forefront of his mind. He’s remained involved and vocal about everything from local police brutality and the death of Charleena Lyles—the pregnant mother of four that was shot seven times by the police in her own home last year—to the recent mayoral race. “Right now the police police themselves,” Sol firmly explained, “and that has to change. Police continue to walk free after murder. I think that the police would act much differently if there were repercussions for their actions.” He went on to explain how important community engagement is in

these polarized times: “[The police] are afraid of the people they’re supposed to be protecting. If you get to know the people in your community, I think a lot of those nerves would go away.” During the mayoral race, Sol sent a message to his fans through a social media video explaining why he supported Nikkita Oliver for Seattle Mayor, citing her views on the housing crisis, education and student loan forgiveness, as well as his personal family history. His parents were able to make a living wage as teachers in Seattle—something increasingly difficult to do with the city’s erasure and gentrification issues. “People are not actively creating plans to help low-income and simply working class people, local people,” Sol argues. “The type of people that are coming in [to Seattle] are unfortunately not aware of the pre-existing environment, and that is one of the biggest problems of gentrification. You are physically and figuratively landing on top of people [when you move here], without looking down.” He doesn’t pretend to have a solution to this complicated issue, but stresses that fact that the old and new Seattleites need to communicate and build solutions—together. “I think that will be just as important as any type of legislation that happens,” he maintains.

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I asked if contributing to these kinds of conversations ever becomes too much for him; there’s always going to be something important that needs addressing, and it can become over whelming for even the most seasoned advocate. He replied, “James Baldwin says something to the effect of, ‘To be black and socially conscious in America is to be in a constant state of rage.’ I would say that that is still true, and it’s not limited to just people in the black community. In order to survive—because I think to a certain degree, survival is victory—when you think about some of these issues, we have to really take care of ourselves. A lot of what we do in the world is not just limited to what happens and how we do [things], but how we process it. It starts with that.” He stressed the importance of not tuning out and staying engaged. But Sol’s platform wasn’t built in a day, and it didn’t come from local advocacy—it came from his music, which his fans are hearing more of these days. He has two new singles out, including my personal favorite, “If You Don’t Call,” which was cleverly released through voicemail. “The way that we release our music and the artwork around our music is an opportunity to separate yourself from the pack,” he notes. “The way you release your music is an extension of your creativity. The whole concept around the record being ‘If You Don’t Call’—[it’s] about those people in your life who no longer call you. I thought it would be super spot-on and funny to have people actually have to call me in order to hear the song.”

[THE POLICE] ARE AFRAID OF THE PEOPLE THEY’RE SUPPOSED TO BE PROTECTING. IF YOU GET TO KNOW THE PEOPLE IN YOUR COMMUNITY, I THINK A LOT OF THOSE NERVES WOULD GO AWAY.

For an extended interview with Sol, visit: dopemagazine.com-sol-interview.com SOLSAYS.COM @SOLZILLA @SOLSAYS

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@SOLZILLA

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M


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RECIPE

APPROVED BY THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA HERSELF! LAURIE AND MARYJANE

Y

ears and years ago, during cooking school, I worked for Ina Garten (“The Barefoot Contessa”) on a bunch of catering events in East Hampton, New York. For those of you not familiar with that part of the world, it’s pretty divine, save the traffic and houses that can rent for $300,000 dollars for a summer month or two. It’s there, under The Barefoot Contessa’s watchful eye, where I learned to make these Chocolate Biscotti. The addition of cannabis and a bit of espresso powder make these the best biscotti I’ve ever tasted. Per fect for Valentine’s Day, the biggest chocolate celebration of the year! LAURIEANDMARYJANE.COM

INSTRUCTIONS

INGREDIENTS Yield: 30 pieces, 2 per serving

1.

Heat oven to 340ºF.

2 cups 1/2 cup 2 tsp. 1 tsp. 1 dash 6 tbsp. 1 cup 2 1 tsp. 6 oz. 2 oz. 1 oz.

2.

In a large bowl combine the flour, cocoa powder, espresso powder, baking soda and salt.

3.

In an electric mixer, beat the cannabutter with the sugar and the eggs for two minutes. Add the vanilla. Add the flour mixture to the egg mixture and stir to combine.

White all-purpose flour Unsweetened cocoa Espresso powder Baking soda Salt Canna-butter Granulated sugar Eggs Vanilla Chocolate chips Chopped dates Pecans, chopped

4. Add chocolate, dates and pecans to the dough and mix well. 5.

Divide into three pieces and roll each piece into a six-inch log. Place a sheet of parchment on a baking sheet. Place the three logs of dough on the baking sheet. Flatten a bit. Bake for 28 minutes. Allow to cool.

6. When cool, carefully cut the rolls on the diagonal into ½ inch slices. 7.

Lower oven to 325°F.

8. Bake the individual slices on parchment paper for six minutes per side.

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9. If you want to make them a little more special, dip the biscotti slices halfway into melted chocolate. Allow to set.

D O P E M AGA Z I N E .CO M




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