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contents Vol 8 IssUE 12
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The Host with the Most Former talk show host Montel Williams combines his entrepreneurial spirit and personal success with medical cannabis to bring awareness and medicine to those who need it.
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contents
inside
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features
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Living the Hemp Life Hemp offers so many nutrients and benefits—here are a few ways to utilize hemp and improve your diet and lifestyle.
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Care and Conversation When it comes to cannabis, every parent should strive to be a responsible consumer.
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Flawless Formula Cannabis companies that are run by friends, couples and like-minded individuals share how they strategically work together towards success.
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Perfect Potential The versatile hemp plant could serve as an environmentally friendly energy replacement for fossil fuels.
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Industry Insider Former reporter Charlo Greene opens up about her experiences and success in the cannabis industry.
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Online Exclusive!
departments news
d Maryland Registers First
8 News Nuggets 9 By the Numbers 10 Local News
14 Entertainment Reviews
in every issue
reviews
32 Growing Culture 34 Destination
Unknown 35 Profile in Courage 36 Recipes 38 News of the Weird
Vol 8 IssUE 12
12 Cool Stuff
Cannabis Cultivator d Legal Cannabis Outsells Viagra
and Tequila
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CULTURE M
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Publisher Jeremy Zachary Editor-In-Chief Jamie Solis associate Editor Ashley Bennett creative consultant Evan Senn Editorial coordinator Benjamin Adams Editorial Contributors Matthew Abel, Sheryll Alexander, Marguerite Arnold, Jake Browne, Cole Garrison, Jasen T. Davis, Alex Distefano, David Downs, Keira Fae, Natasha Guimond, Addison Herron-Wheeler, Pamela Jayne, M. Jay, Heather Johnson, Kevin Longrie, Emily Manke, Meital Manzuri, Dan Mitchell, Madison Ortiz, Denise Pollicella, R. Scott Rappold, Paul Rogers, Ed Rosenthal, Lanny Swerdlow, Jefferson Van Billiard, Simon Weedn, Laurie Wolf, Zara Zhi Photographers Kristen Angelo, Steve Baker, Kristopher Christensen, John Gilhooley, Joel Meaders, Tonya Perme, Mike Rosati, Josué Rivas, Eric Stoner Art Director Steven Myrdahl production manager Tommy LaFleur Graphic DesignerS Payden Corden, Nathan Hernandez sales director Justin Olson Account Executives Jon Bookatz, Alex Brizicky, Eric Bulls, Kim Cook, Cole Garrison, Beau Odom, Gloria Santiago, Garry Stalling, Ryan Tripp, Chris Walker, Vic Zaragoza general Manager Iris Norsworthy Office Assistant Angelina Thompson digital media Editor David Edmundson Intern Kiara Manns Distribution Manager Cruz Bobadilla
Culture® Magazine is published every month and distributes magazines at over 500 locations throughout Oregon. No articles, illustrations, photographs, or other matter within may be reproduced without written permission. Culture® Magazine is a registered trademark. All rights reserved. Phone / Fax 888.694.2046 www.iReadCulture.com
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NEWS
nuggetS
OLCC Approves Rule to Allow Recreational Cultivators to Supply Medical Patients The Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC) has approved rules to allow licensed recreational cultivators to grow cannabis specifically for Oregon Medical Marijuana Program (OMMP) cardholders. The “medical bump-up” option allows producers to grow additional canopy above the limit that is currently allowed by their OLCC license. This allows recreational producers to transfer excess cannabis product to medical cannabis patients, caregivers, processors and dispensaries. “This will be the first medicallygrown marijuana in Oregon under regulations that meet the compliance guidelines of the federal Cole Memo,” Marvin Revoal, Acting Chair of the OLCC stated. “It’s important that we keep legally produced marijuana from being diverted to the illegal market, and again Oregon’s leadership shows that both medical and recreational marijuana can be regulated together.” The OLCC already allows some recreational producers to sell medical products. Under the "bump-up" rules, up to 25 percent of the cannabis grown for medical patients can be sold to OMMP processors and dispensaries. The "bump-up" rules took effect on May 1.
Georgia Governor Signs Medical Cannabis Expansion Bill Rep. Allen Peake announced that Gov. Nathan Deal signed Senate Bill 16 on May 9. The bill will expand the state’s medical cannabis oil program to add six additional illnesses to the list of qualifying conditions. “With Gov. Deal’s signature today, Georgia’s medical cannabis program takes another positive step forward,” Rep. Peake stated. “As of [May 9], 1,738 citizens and 354 doctors are registered with Georgia’s Low THC Oil Registry program, and I’m confident that the addition of six conditions to this very successful program will allow even more hurting Georgians with debilitating illnesses to have a ray of hope for a better quality of life.” Registered patients are allowed to possess a maximum of 20 fluid ounces of cannabis oil with a maximum of five percent THC. Severe Tourette syndrome, Epidermolysis Bullosa, Alzheimer’s disease, symptomatic AIDS, peripheral neuropathy and hospice patients who have received authorization were added to the list of qualifying conditions. SB-16 also adds medical card reciprocity to the program and removes the one-year eligibility requirement.
Oregon Lawmakers Approve Bill to Remove Recreational Cannabis Labels The Oregon State Senate has approved Senate Bill 1057, which no longer requires testing information to be included on labels for recreational cannabis products. While the bill aims to impose better tracking of medical cannabis, it also removes the requirement for companies to include the cannabis product testing ID or where that product was originally tested. As a result, many are worried that this change will negatively affect consumer safety. Oregonians for Public Safety issued a press release stating its concerns about this bill, which could result in possible health risks. “The bill also included a provision to remove important health and safety related test results from recreational cannabis labels. One of the dissenting senators claimed that the body was moving too fast with the bill—opening the legislation to possible oversights,” the statement read. Many have also voiced concerns over the fact that SB-1057 did not receive a public hearing. SB1057 was also approved by the House on May 22.
Chile is First Nation in South America to Sell Cannabis in Pharmacies Canadian cannabis producer Tilray’s T100 and TC100 cannabis-based products are now available for purchase in pharmacies in Chile, which began in mid-May. Before then, patients could only obtain medicine by import or through one of Chile’s narrow list of dedicated farms. It’s the first time that any nation in South America has moved forward to allow pharmacy sales of cannabis products. The average cost for a month’s worth of treatment will be $310. Tilray is partnering with Alef Biotechnology, a company that is licensed through the government of Chile. Roberto Roizman, Alef board president explained how this will benefit patients in the country. “By importing Tilray’s medical cannabis products to Chile we intend to ease the suffering of those in need by offering pure, precise and predictable medical cannabis products.” The Chilean Congress is currently reviewing a bill that would allow patients to grow their own plants at home. Additionally, the nearby country of Uruguay will begin selling recreational cannabis in pharmacies in July. 8
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The maximum amount of money, in millions of dollars, that has been invested in startup cannabis businesses in Oregon over the past six months: (Source: Northwest Public Radio)
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The number of cannabis business license applications submitted in Multnomah County, as of May 16: (Source: Oregon Liquor Control Commission)
463
The number of Oregon-based cannabis testing laboratory applications submitted, as of May 16, that are in varying stages of the approval process: (Source: Oregon Liquor Control Commission)
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The approximate amount of money, in millions of dollars, that the state of Oregon has collected in recreational cannabis tax revenue since 2016: (Source: Oregon Public Broadcast)
The average amount of “useable” cannabis, in grams, that medical cannabis patients in Oregon purchased per transaction between June and December 2016: (Source: Oregon Health Authority)
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7.52
The percentage of North Carolinians who stated in a survey that they want to see medical cannabis legalized:
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The approximate amount of money, in thousands of dollars, that cannabis industry clients in Maine paid in lobbying fees between December 1, 2016 and (Source: Portland March 31, 2017: Press Herald)
140
(Source: The News & Observer)
The approximate number of people who attended the Extravaganja festival in Massachusetts in late-April: (Source: Daily Collegian)
10,000
The approximate number of people in Colorado and California who were surveyed as cannabis consumers by BDS Analytics: (Source: Denver Westword)
2,000
The number of medical practitioners in New York who are registered under the state’s medical cannabis program: (Source: WKBW Buffalo)
989
PDX HEMPFEST Expo
WHAT: PDX Hempfest Expo. WHEN/WHERE: Sat, June 10. Portland Expo Center, 2060 N. Marine Dr., Portland. INFO: Visit pdxhempfestexpo.com for details. The Seattle HEMPFEST and Oregon’s Hemp Convention have combined to bring the public PDX HEMPFEST for the fourth year in a row. The full-day event will help those looking to expand their knowledge of the cannabis industry by bringing in professionals to host a variety of presentations on cannabis. One of the speakers for this year is Ed Rosenthal who will instruct a lecture on methods to save both time and energy when cultivating. His demonstration is aimed at using new and efficient technology that will cut down staff costs and update
harvesting techniques. The huge selection of speakers will also include Attorney Paul Loney, Cliff Thomason of the Oregon Hemp Company, Karen Sprague, Nishan Karassik, Courtney Moran and Sarah Jane Gallegos. The exposition has an extensive itinerary found on its website with hours designated for discussions on Oregon cannabis law, building homes out of hemp, edible manufacturing, cannabis science, topicals, insurance and more. Come and meet with all the cannabis industry leaders in the area, and connect to progress your own business. (Kiara Manns) iReadCULTURE.com
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NEWS
LOCAL
Divided on Dividends
Oregon cannabis tax revenue may be redirected from schools
by Heather Johnson
M
easure 91 passed in 2014 and legalized recreational cannabis in Oregon. The measure outlined certain designations to disperse tax revenue. Oregon currently imposes a 17 percent tax at the points of sale within the recreational market. The tax money that is collected by the state government is then reallocated to community services and state organizations. On May 17, the Senate voted unanimously 30-0 to pass Senate Bill 845, which redistributes the transfer of money to cities and counties. Under SB-845, some of the tax revenue will be taken away from schools and put toward funding drug addiction services. The Oregon Department of Revenue (ODR) is responsible for holding retailers accountable for paying sales taxes. Taxes are collected and distributed by the ODR, according to the percentages written into Oregon cannabis law. The amount of revenue brought in by recreational sales far exceed what was predicted, and revenue increased even more with the allowed sale of edibles and concentrates, which began in June 2016. Oregon has brought in almost $70 million in tax revenue from the sale of recreational cannabis to date. When Oregon voters made choices about
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2nd Annual Portland 420 Games
cannabis legalization in 2014, voters were told how the revenue from legalized cannabis would help Oregon schools and students, and many supported Measure 91 for this reason. Measure 91 directed that 40 percent of the available revenue to the Common School Fund, which has been around since Oregon became a state. Thirty-five percent of the revenue goes to law enforcement, and five percent goes to the Oregon Health Authority with only 20 percent going to mental health and addiction services. The Oregon Senate, however, now is attempting to allocate a bigger percentage of that revenue toward mental health and addiction treatment services. If passed, SB-845 would channel almost $20 million away from the Common School Fund. Lawmakers who are supportive of the new bill would like to see the money spent on drug addiction services. The Oregon Medical Marijuana Program provides cannabis to Oregonians as medicine; it is not a dangerous habit-forming drug that requires addiction treatment. There are several vocal organizations that are opposed to the bill. The Oregon School Boards Association, for instance, called the bill “unacceptable.” Oregon’s recreational cannabis sales are off the charts, creating an unprecedented amount of revenue to be used by government agencies. Oregon finally has the funds to improve our schools. However, many are left wondering who will end up with the surplus, and how we can use cannabis tax revenue to benefit Oregonians the most. The last-minute details concerning how much revenue would go towards mental health and addiction treatment need to be ironed out by the Finance and Revenue Committee. As of mid-May, the bill was referred to Revenue and heads to the House for approval. c
The Second Annual 420 Games has returned to Portland! For those who haven’t heard, The 420 Games fuses outdoor activities and the cannabis industry together, creating an all-day experience of athletic activities such as scenic nature walks or bicycle races to help prove that the cannabis stigma is incorrect. The games start bright and early on Saturday morning where attendees will explore the Sellwood Riverfront Park in an excursion of 4.20 miles. Ride your bike, jog the path, roller skate or take a peaceful stroll while you take in the fresh air. After the course, everyone will gather at trail’s end for a celebratory finish line party. Lagunitas will sponsor a two-hour beer tasting event while various musical performances take place throughout the afternoon. Enjoy live music, learn a few things during the academic speeches, laugh at live standup acts and check out the many exhibitors. (Kiara Manns) WHAT: 2nd Annual Portland 420 Games. WHEN/WHERE: Sat, June 10. Sellwood Riverfront Park, between SE Spokane St. and Oaks Pkwy., Portland. INFO: Visit 420games.org for details.
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REVIEWs
3. For More Products Go To iReadCulture.com
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1. 14er Joint Tip Tired of passing around your preroll only to have it return soggy and unsanitary? Elevate Accessories is offering heirloom-quality wooden joint filter tips. They are perfect for cone joints or cigars. The tips come with an engraved logo and a hexagonal faceted shape that you can easily grip. The tips are made out of black walnut or hard maple. Regular use of wooden tips will help season and condition the wood. In order to make your tip last a lifetime, Elevate Accessories recommends using a crutch every time you use it. The 14er Joint Tip is geared for social consumers who don’t want unnecessary germs and wasted roaches. PRICE: $15 MORE INFORMATION: elevateaccessories.com
2. Goldleaf Grow Planner Cultivators will love Goldleaf’s swank and utilitarian grow planner. The only way growers can remember what victories and failures they encountered in past batches is to jot down information. The planner provides templated weekly entry pages for over 20 weeks. Track down your feeding schedule with spaces for the cycle, week, light and nutrients. With this planner you can record the PH levels and supplies, while planning your garden. You can also fill out the effects, sampling times and flavor wheel according to your garden samples. The cream-colored pages are designed to be seen under HID light. The discrete retro-styled cover is stamped with a Goldleaf gold emblem. It’s a must for any cultivator who needs a little more order to their cultivation routine. PRICE: $16 MORE INFORMATION: shopgoldleaf.com 12
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Robin Wood Hemp Watch Support a healthier, greener ecosystem with one of the most eco-friendly watches available. The 100 percent vegan Robin Wood watch is made with a natural hemp strap and is encased in bamboo. The all-natural aesthetic of wooden products with a visible grain is part of the appeal. Time settings can be adjusted with a diagonal bamboo knob. All materials are hypoallergenic, and no animals were harmed in this watch’s production. The jumbo-sized Japanese quartz mechanism is made by SEIKO/ Hattori and is protected behind highquality mineral glass. The vegetablebased materials are made from sustainable farming. It is also resistant to water splashes, and the product is protected with a two-year warranty. The purchase of a Robin Wood watch supports ecological campaigns, and each watch comes with a thank you note for supporting the ecosystem. PRICE: $103.03 MORE INFORMATION: www.etsy.com/shop/robinwoodco
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OG Four 2.0 RiG Edition When a normal-sized vaporizer pen is not enough, get massive rig-like rips from the OG Four 2.0 RiG Edition from #ThisThingRips. Everything about this pen is oversized, from the mouthpiece to the battery. Exhale eye-popping milky white clouds of vapor that will impress your friends. The patented Lava-Quartz technology works with a full quartz bowl and dual quartz rods wrapped in high-quality titanium coils. The “Set it & Forget it” feature on the large smart battery “remembers” your last setting, and you can even charge the device while it is in use. The low-key silicone-lined jar screws into the bottom of the pen and is almost undetectable. The transparent visual reaction chamber guarantees maximum flow and dwarfs other vape pen chambers. The kit is complete, containing everything that is needed including a hypercharging cable, a stainless steel tool, cleansing wipes, silicone rings and a stand. PRICE: $129.99 MORE INFORMATION: thisthingrips.com
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entertainment
REVIEWs
BOOK
Legal Weed: A Comprehensive Guide to California Cannabis Law & Regulation Pub. Legally-Blunt Meital Manzuri, Michelle Mabugat and Alexa Steinberg of Manzuri Law The promise of California’s upcoming legal cannabis market has entrepreneurs everywhere looking to the future. Legal Weed is an invaluable resource for professionals who are looking to navigate the regulations on medical and recreational cannabis in California. Written for cannabis entrepreneurs of every experience level, this guide provides essential recommendations and best business practices that will answer any possible question regarding California law and federal law, with knowledge and insight that is backed up by the authors’ many years of experience working in cannabis business law and criminal defense cases. (Jacob Cannon) 14
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Available on: PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC Release Date: June 2
GAME
Tekken 7 Dev. Bandai Namco Entertainment Pub. Bandai Namco Tekken 7 continues to break the mold of improved fighting games. This installment is the first to be created using the Unreal Engine and is based on the arcade release launched exclusively in Japan back in 2015. This oneon-one fighting game offers two new unique fighting systems, “Rage Art” (which allows critically low-health players to deal 30 percent damage) and Power Crush (which enables attacking even when an enemy is executing attacks), among other modes of gameplay. New and returning Tekken players will have plenty of options while they defeat their friends in-person and online. (Nicole Potter)
MOVIE
Logan
MUSIC
Dir. James Mangold
Big Bad Rooster
20th Century Fox
Big Bad Rooster Self-Released
It might be hard to believe, but it’s been almost 20 years since X-Men ushered films based on comic books into the modern era. In the nearly two decades since, audiences have been treated to a tremendous array of comic-based movies loaded with near countless super heroes and brimming with an incredible amount of mayhem and destruction. However, in the most recent installment of the X-Men film franchise, cartoony, big city annihilation has given way to heartfelt drama in Logan. Hugh Jackman and Patrick Stewart reprise their roles as Wolverine and Professor Xavier respectively, and while the movie still features edge-of-yourseat action, the more human aspects of the characters are explored and laid out to fantastic effect. (Simon Weedn)
Bluegrass has its roots in some of the oldest musical traditions of the United States and has long been a source of authentic story telling about rural life and working people. Though the genre has enjoyed a surge in reinterest as Americana music has regained some popularity, it can be difficult to find acts moving beyond old traditionals and pushing the genre into new territory. Thankfully, Big Bad Rooster is on the rise and available to please those ears looking for new flavor in a classic form. The band’s debut fulllength blends vibrant stories of modern life and contemporary struggles, with an exciting style that will appeal to both purists and new-comers alike. (Simon Weedn)
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Guided by personal experience,
Montel Williams brings the healing of cannabis to the masses By Dan Mitchell
ontel Williams has filled many roles during his career: Awardwinning daytime talk show host, actor, writer and activist. But above all, he’s a passionate promoter. As such, his word choices near perfection, he has the uncanny ability to speak in public with ease and sway listeners and viewers to feel. Whether he’s rattling off the chemical properties of his new line of cannabis products, or telling his own compelling life story, including his time in Naval Academy or his experience suffering from Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and how cannabis has eased that suffering, his passion comes through loud and clear. Williams hosted The Montel Williams Show from 1991 to 2008. It was often the standard, daytime-talk fare—psychics, battling couples, troubled teens. But, especially in the show’s later years, Williams focused less on covering the typical stories that other shows did. Instead, he featured guests with inspirational stories of overcoming obstacles, lost loves reuniting and parents finding the children they had put up for adoption. After his diagnosis in 1999, he started devoting shows to MS. The show was later canceled
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in 2008. Williams has worn many hats since then: An advocate for veterans, a commercial spokesman, a philanthropist, cannabis advocate and now, a successful cannabis entrepreneur. After his MS diagnosis, Williams became addicted to the opioids he was taking to control his debilitating symptoms, and he even attempted suicide when things were at their worst. In order to get off the opioids that were wrecking his life even worse than the MS, he turned to a more natural solution, cannabis. When asked about his first experience with cannabis, about what it was like, how it made him feel, and how it changed him, he wept. His passion for this medicinal plant went far beyond the perfect speeches and flawless suits. It was clear that cannabis did in fact save his life. Montel’s most recent passion project is Lenitiv Scientific, LLC, a new company specializing in medical cannabis products that has just released its first new line, available in select areas. LenitivLabs offers a range of edibles and concentrates with various ratios of THC and CBD. Williams uses the word “purity” a lot in discussing the development of the product line, which he says is ongoing. “I’m not gonna talk bad about what’s come before,” he said. “But science has now hit the right mark, and we can get this done. And it’s just going to get better. We’re going to keep purifying to the point where the patients are allowed to titrate themselves to the level they need rather than at the level the dispenser or provider thinks is right.” >>
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When were you diagnosed with MS? I was diagnosed in 2000, but it should have been more like 1980, when I was already having miniepisodes. But back then, MS was thought of as a disease of Caucasian women, of Europeans. It was called a “Viking disease.” What were the symptoms like once it got really bad? I had really, really, really, really severe neuropathy, and I had severe cramping and spasticity. My legs would just be kicking and twitching. I’d wake up every 25 minutes. For 10 years, I didn’t get more than an hour-and-a-half, two hours of sleep in a row.
that I got from very expensive Western medications, I get from cannabis. Did you smoke cannabis recreationally, before you were diagnosed with MS? In high school, I dabbled a little bit—it was the ‘70s, man. But then I was in the military and in the government for 22 years, and I got tested all the time. What was your experience when you finally came upon
You were making yourself crazy, looking for relief and looking to get off opioids. How did you discover cannabis? I chased every single one of the opioids there is, and some that you don’t even know about. We consume far more opiates here in the United States of America than anyplace else, most of them consumed illegally. Why do we do all that? Because we are inundated from birth to death with ads that tell you, “There’s something wrong with you, take a pill.” I’m convinced that the same amount of relief
Soothing Science
Montel Williams demonstrates the purity behind Lenitiv Scientific’s premiere line of medicalgrade cannabis products at a recent demonstration. As a passionate celebrity who has personally suffered from Multiple Sclerosis throughout his adult life, Williams is dedicated to ensuring LenitivLabs’ products, such as CO2 Extracted PURE Refined Oils and Pure All Natural Mini Shot Drinks, are made with top-quality cannabis and no harmful additives. These products are now available throughout California and will expand to other legal cannabis states in the future. photos by Mike Rosati
“I haven’t gone a day without cannabis in 17 years.” 18
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cannabis as a source of relief for your MS? I don’t want to go too deep into some things, but taking opioids does all kinds of horrible things to your body. Like, to your intestinal tract. It was a nightmare. It’s supposed to make you feel better, and all it does is make you drool in the corner and wonder why your shit still hurts. It was time to stop. I went to the doctor after my second suicide attempt and said, “I gotta do something about this; it ain’t working.” He said to me, “I know some people, but I didn’t just tell you that. [And if you say I told you this], I will tell everybody that you are a liar, that I never said that.” So, how did you obtain cannabis, and how did it go when you did? In 2001, I flew to L.A. from New York, where I taped my show. L.A. had a legal program. And immediately, I was in the culture. And maybe six months into it, I started eating [cannabis]. This was before we had all these products we have now, so it was just, like, cupcakes. Then I started cooking in my kitchen. I didn’t really know what I was doing, but I started making these poppy seed muffins. I haven’t gone a day without cannabis in 17 years. About 20 of those days, I’ve been on Marinol, unfortunately, because I was traveling to places where I didn’t want to get my hands cut off. Marinol is terrible. Somebody should shut that business down. Or leave it up, but just for people who need cover. But when you first started smoking, to get off opioids ... Let me tell you something: For the first month, I was rolling joints. That went out the window. The second two weeks, I was sticking it into a pipe. That went out the window. >>
“. . . science has now hit the right mark, and we can get this done. And it’s just going to get better. We’re going to keep purifying to the point where the patients are allowed to titrate themselves to the level they need rather than at the level the dispenser or provider thinks is right.”
Was smoking cannabis working for you? Oh, yeah. But it was destroying my lungs. I went to Vancouver and got a Volcano. I got off the leaf to go to the kief. Let’s see, this was in 2002, I think, when I got a vaporizer. What was it like for you when you first started using cannabis? Was it, like, a revelation, or . . . ? Let me tell you something. Revelation— um—I’m trying to say without, uhhh . . . I’ve been crying all damned day, so I’m tired of crying. I’m not gonna do it anymore. “Revelation” is an understatement. So the difference was pretty much instantaneous? When I hit the right spot, yes. It took about three months of getting my saturation level up, to stop being high, and start getting relief. Now, I have it fined-tuned to the point where if I wake up in the middle of the night with pain, I go in the bathroom—I’ve got five pens in there, and I know which is which in the dark. Bang, I’m back to sleep. I’ve got it all dialed in, absolutely. c
+ www.lenitivlabs.com
SAY WHAT!?
“While researchers wait for marijuana to study whether it helps with PTSD, plenty of veterans will tell you it absolutely does.” - John Oliver, Host of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
“Legalizing marijuana has already created thousands of fulltime jobs, and it’s raised hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue, a lot of which has gone toward public schools.” - Trevor Noah, Host of The Daily Show
“Research is indicating that CBD-rich strains of the plant actually have anti-tumoral properties. Because the U.S. government classifies marijuana as having no medical value, the clinical research has been blocked.” - Ricki Lake, Former Host of The Ricki Lake Show, Filmmaker of Weed the People
“U.S. marijuana sales might top $2.3 billion this year. I’m not saying I support it. I’m just saying it’s now available in the Ellen Shop.” - Ellen DeGeneres, Host of The Ellen Show
“I just feel like once the government stops the lie the rest of us will be better for it—and the lie is that [cannabis is] a ‘gateway drug.’” - Whoopi Goldberg, Co-Host on The View
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A Better Life with Hemp Hemp is one of the most nutritious and renewable plants on the planet and is often overlooked—here are some great ways to easily add hemp into your life
FOOD
We all want to be healthier, have longer lives and get the nutrition our body needs and deserves, but figuring out exactly how to do that can be expensive and difficult.
by Evan Senn Hemp is one of the most versatile plants on our planet, and in addition to being a perfect protein, hemp can be used as a great renewable and strong source for any paper products, environmentally-friendly plastic substitutes and a clean-burning fuel source. If you don’t have access to hemp products or food, or you aren’t quite sure how to infuse your life with hemp, we’re here to help. In honor of Hemp History Week this month (June 5-11), we have put together a list of different ways you can utilize the many nutrients and benefits that hemp offers for your diet and lifestyle.
Relying on other people’s products and the availability of said products can be costly and hard to find, leaving us disappointed and under-nourished. Depending on where you live, you could
have great access to hemp products and foods, and if you do have that access, there is no reason why your whole life shouldn’t be infused with hemp in many different ways.
Hemp Seeds he seeds from hemp plants are versatile and tasty delights. Hemp seeds are rich in protein, polyunsaturated fatty acids, omega 6, omega 3 and insoluble fiber. They are a good source of tocopherols (vitamin E antioxidants). They’re also packed with minerals such as potassium, magnesium, iron, zinc, calcium and phosphorus, plus micro-elements like strontium, thorium and
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Hemp Oil emp oil contains gamma-linolenic acid, which is converted to the protective hormone prostaglandin PGE1, which helps regulate hormonal balance (and supports menopausal health). Hemp oil can help lower cholesterol; it can help moderate blood sugar levels, prevent psoriasis, boost immunity, and it can even prevent varicose veins.
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Hemp oil is a great to use whenever you’re in need of making a salad dressing, an infused oil for dipping (rosemary, garlic, chili or shallot-infused oils are easy and tasty for dipping breads), or lightly sautéing vegetables in. It is not recommended for high heat though, as the high temperatures can denature the unsaturated fats of hemp oil and turn them into saturated fats. >>
chromium. Both the complete protein and the oils contained in hemp seeds (rich in lanolin and linolenic acids) are in ideal ratios for optimum human nutrition. You can eat them raw (hulled), roasted like nuts, or you can use them to make other things! You can use blended hemp seeds to make hemp cream, hemp seed cheeses, mayonnaise, pesto sauce, Alfredo sauce, non-dairy sour cream or even a creamy and nutty butter.
Hemp Milk rganic hemp milk is also a great alternative to cow’s milk. In just one ounce of hemp milk, you get vitamins A, B12, D, E, Folic Acid, magnesium, iron, 4 grams of digestible protein, potassium, zinc, riboflavin, phosphorous, 900mg of omega 3, 2800mg of omega 6, all 10 essential amino acids and 46 percent of your daily allowance of calcium—all with no cholesterol. You can use hemp milk as a milk replacement in all baking and cooking, in your tea or coffee, or even in your cereal. Hemp milk is a quick nut milk to make because unlike almonds or
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cashews, hemp seeds don’t need to be soaked before blended. All you need is one cup hemp seeds (also called hearts or shelled hemp nuts), three-to-four cups filtered water, one tablespoon coconut oil (optional), two tablespoons Stevia or agave, one-half a tablespoon of organic vanilla powder and a pinch of sea salt. In a high-speed blender, add hemp seeds and water, and blend on high until fully liquefied. Using a cheesecloth or milk bag, strain into a wide glass bowl, and discard the hemp fibers (or keep for cheese-making later) from the bag, and pour the milk back into a clean blender.
Hemp Protein emp protein powder is a common powder sold at health food stores and can be a great addition to shakes and baked goods. You can also find hemp protein bars, and hemp seed snacks available at most health food stores as well.
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LIFESTYLE No other natural resource offers the potential of hemp. Hemp is capable of producing significant quantities
of paper, textiles, building materials, medicine, paint, detergent, varnish, oil, ink and fuel. Unlike other crops, hemp can grow in most climates and on
most farmlands throughout the world with moderate requirements. Look no further for creative ways to incorporate hemp into your everyday lifestyle.
Hemp Clothing emp clothing absorbs and releases perspiration quickly and breathes well, making it ideal for a textile in clothing. Hemp clothing absorbs dye easily, retains color well, holds up to repeated washings (never needing dry cleaning), and also is naturally
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anti-microbial. It is uniquely resistant to mold and mildew, and believe it or not, hemp fabric gets softer the more it’s washed and worn. Many companies all over the world use hemp fabrics, including major brands like Patagonia, Royal Apparel and Barneys New York. >> iReadCULTURE.com
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Cannabis Facial T
etrahydrocannabinol (THC) and other cannabinoids are powerful antioxidants and can aid in cell repair and cellular regeneration. In recent studies, it’s been proven that nonpsychoactive cannabidiol (CBD) is a more powerful antioxidant than vitamins A, C and E. When applied topically to your skin, these antioxidants tackle fine lines and wrinkles with supreme skin conditioning power. THC is also an anti-inflammatory agent and is heavy in omegas, which are essential for moisturizing dull skin.
Consider creating a D.I.Y. hemp-infused facial. All you need is one ripe avocado, one-fourth cup hemp oil, two tablespoons spirulina powder (to kill toxins and brighten skin), several drops of patchouli oil (because this essential oil fights acne and sagging skin) and a blender. Blend until the mixture is creamy, smooth and bright green, and with a steamedcleaned face, apply and sit for at least 15-20 minutes, wash it off and voila! You’re on your way to bright, clean and blissful skin.
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emp seed oil is a fantastic cleansing oil, and is safe to use on sensitive or acne prone skin; it will not clog your pores. Paired with jojoba oil and a little of your favorite essential oil, you’ve got the makings of a natural, healthy cleanser! Jojoba is an anti-bacterial and also reduces sebum production in our skin, so it’s a great addition to any cleanser; you can also use safflower oil or evening primrose oil. Facial cleansers with lathering ingredients disrupt the skin’s natural oil balance, which can make dry skin drier and oily skin produce even more oil to compensate. When you use the right types of oils in the
Hemp Toothpaste H
emp toothpaste can be a really effective and excellent way to care for your teeth. It effectively calms and prevents tooth sensitivity, bleeding gums and minor sores or cracks in the mouth. Making your own toothpaste is costefficient, healthier than store bought toothpaste and just as effective. To make your own hemp toothpaste, all you need is one-fourth cup of coconut oil, one-fourth cup of hemp oil, two to three tablespoons of baking soda, two small packets of Stevia powder (to
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add some sweetness to the mix), 1520 drops of peppermint or cinnamon essential oil, and 10 drops of myrrh extract (optional). Mix it all together, and keep it in a cool dry place. There are many other ways to utilize hemp in your lifestyle, and the products available with hemp already in it are vast and varied. You can find fantastic hemp seed shampoos and conditioners, hemp lotions and creams; you can even find after-tattoo care infused with hemp like with brand Ink 20/20. c
right combinations to cleanse the face, you’ll be able to gently yet effectively cleanse the skin of pore-clogging oils and bacteria while also maintaining moisture balance. Start by massaging the oil into dry skin using circular motions, focusing especially on where pores are clogged or where you’re wearing a bit more makeup than usual. Saturate a clean washcloth with hot tap water, then wring it out and gently remove the oil and the makeup with it. For combination skin, switch to a 1:4 ratio (one part castor oil, four parts carrier oil), and for dry and/or sensitive skin, a 1:10 ratio seems to work best.
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Parental Principles The basics of responsible cannabis consuming parents by Emily Manke
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his time of year, it’s appropriate to consider, discuss and commiserate on the joys and pitfalls of parenting. For those dedicated moms and dads who also happen to be cannabis consumers, parenthood can come with its own special set of challenges. Parenting and consuming cannabis is one of those gray areas that isn’t talked about nearly enough. However, with the stigma surrounding cannabis slowly evaporating, it’s high time we start having the conversation.
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Keep Cannabis Away From Kids “The foster families I license are allowed to have marijuana in their home as long as it is inaccessible to children, per state law,” LeClari says. While this is not necessarily a legal requirement for traditional parents in legal cannabis states, it’s definitely a best practice, and one LeClair and her partner adhere to at home. When not in use, store cannabis in a locked container that kids will not have access to, on the top shelf of your bedroom closet for example. Make sure all cannabis containers are clearly and obviously labeled. For edibles that look like candy, put poison stickers on them if you have young kids in the house. That way in the off chance they do get their hands on them, they’re clued in that what looks like delicious candy, may actually be dangerous.
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Do Not to Use Cannabis in Front of Children Modeling the use of any substance in front of kids can be harmful. By using cannabis in front of your children, you are subjecting them to adult behavior they may not be ready to process. Additionally, LeClair notes, for kids with a trauma history, this may be a trigger for them from their past or in their future. The same goes for alcohol. Additionally, while second-hand smoke
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Can you be a responsible parent and a cannabis consumer? Of course you can. But there are some ground rules you and your parenting partner should set to keep your kids safe and sound. CULTURE talked to foster parent licensor, parent of three kids and cannabis consumer, Cori LeClair, about how to consume, store and deal with cannabis safely and respectfully as a parent. “As a licensor for foster homes, and a parent, safe cannabis use is something that is taken seriously in my home and addressed in my work,” LeClair told CULTURE. When asked how to maintain a safe environment in your home if you’re a cannabis consumer, LeClair had five tips to keep kids safe, while keeping parents in compliance with the law. In all instances, be sure to abide by your respective state and local laws.
from cannabis may not be as harmful as tobacco or other drugs, it’s still not ideal for kids to be exposed to it in any capacity.
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Don’t Drive with Your Kids If You’re Under the Influence While this may seem like a no-brainer, it bears repeating. If you plan on consuming cannabis, make sure you will not need to transport any children afterwards. This will require planning ahead. LeClair and her partner always either designate a driver, or make sure they are fine to stay home for the evening before using cannabis with kids in their care. In case of emergency, you can always call a friend or family member, a cab or worst case scenario, an ambulance.
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Make Sure One Parent Stays Alert Enough to Operate in an Emergency For the most part, cannabis doesn’t render a person inebriated enough that they’re incapable of acting in an emergency. That said, with kids involved, you can never be too careful. If you’re trying out a new cannabis product and are unsure how you’ll react, make sure one of you doesn’t partake. Stick to light, predictable cannabis use if you have to care for kids. Otherwise, wait until they are with a grandparent or other guardian for the night.
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Find the Right Time to Talk to Kids About Cannabis When your kids are small, there’s really no need to educate them on cannabis at all unless they ask. Even then, it’s probably best to keep the answers somewhat vague, as to maintain their innocence and to avoid overly piquing their curiosity. So when is the right time to talk to kids about cannabis use? LeClair suggests parents wait until they are ready to have “the drug talk” with their kids. Most professionals suggest parents begin these conversations around sixth or seventh grade, depending on the child. Whether or not you decide to disclose your cannabis use is a personal decision. No matter what you choose to tell your kids, or what rules you decide to impose in your home, a good basic outline for a script regarding cannabis use is that it’s a personal choice that requires being a responsible adult to make, like alcohol.
There’s no one right way to be a parent. Some may choose to abstain from cannabis altogether when they become parents—and more power to them. But for the rest of us, you can keep your kids safe, happy and healthy, and not have to give up everything you enjoyed preparenthood. c
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Best Buds in the Business Professionals in the by Addison Herron-Wheeler
cannabis industry give insight into how their strategic partnerships ensure success
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o r many, running a cannabis company is a dream job. In which other profession does one get to be an entrepreneur, an advocate, a philanthropist and an industry pioneer? When overcoming obstacles and setting new precedents, strategic partnerships between two or more individuals often ensure continued success. There are plenty of cannabis companies that are run by couples, best friends, families and close-knit pairs or groups of like-minded individuals. Outstanding professionals shared with CULTURE how they work together to run a prosperous company and thrive in a competitive market.
Whoopi & Maya his California-based company is run by none other than beloved actress Whoopi Goldberg and her extremely successful business partner Maya Elisabeth, a woman known for leading the thriving company Om Edibles. Whoopi & Maya is a company that offers cannabis products for menstrual relief, providing an outlet for women who need help in an area that is sometimes embarrassing to talk about. Elisabeth told CULTURE some secrets to how the two women
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work together poetically. “Whoopi is amazing; she is truly inspirational and I look up to her so much,” Elisabeth explained. “I think our partnership is really positive. One of the things we have in common is our business, and also our connection being women.” Not only do both women have a positive attitude, but Elisabeth explained that their business ultimately started after they met and hit it off right away. “Being a pair is actually really beautiful because we get along,” Elisabeth said.
Kushmoji olorado entrepreneurs Ben Tyson and Olivia Mannix saw a serious gap in Colorado’s industry that needed to be filled. Marketing and advertising are extremely competitive and move at a fast pace, but because there are so many companies out there, brand recognition and solid associations with companies are hard to come by. That is why buddies Tyson and Mannix decided to work branding into something extremely easy to share—emojis. While similar personalities are one reason some business partners find success, others like Tyson and Mannix find strengths in their differences. “Our relationship is fantastic,
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photo by Timothy White
but intensely complicated, as our personalities and communication styles could not be more different,” Tyson explained to CULTURE. “I regard that in a positive light, though, because our various approaches to problem solving within the business allow us to see things from a variety of angles.” Although they do have many differences and see their relationships as a type of yin and yang balance, over time the two have realized that they may not be as opposite as they once believed. “Ironically, the more we work together, and the more we problem solve together, the more we realize how alike we actually are,” Tyson said. >>
Love’s Oven he idea of cannabis and family values going handin-hand may sound peculiar to some, but it’s prevalence in the cannabis industry cannot be denied. Not only has the plant repaired the lives of many families with sick children, those who recognize its healing properties realize just how beneficial it can be while also bringing loved ones together. At Love’s Oven, Peggy Moore, one of the company’s founding business partners, realizes the importance of community and family. She runs the business along with Teresa Walz, her younger sister, and Joshua and
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Walter Nettles, her two sons. Moore opened up to CULTURE about how the family members are able to keep business problems separate from their family lives. “We’ve certainly had our fair share of business disagreements over the years, but we really set a guideline that we will never allow any business ‘stuff’ to affect our familial relationship,” Moore explained. “A positive that we’ve noticed is the ‘trickle down’ effect of a family-run business, where all employees at Love’s Oven feel like family and really treat each other that way, which makes for a great work environment.”
Our relationship is fantastic, but intensely complicated, as our personalities and communication styles could not be more different. I regard that in a positive light, though, because our various approaches to problem solving within the business allow us to see things from a variety of angles. Kiva Confections lose partnerships are extremely helpful for successful businesses in new and experimental industries, so it makes sense that a married couple who is already committed wholly to one another would make for a great team. Kristi Knoblich married her husband Scott after meeting him in photography school. The two founded Kiva Confections in 2010 from their kitchen at home, with the hopes of making some high-quality edibles for those who need relief. Kristi explained to CULTURE how running a company alongside one’s spouse could be the upmost advantage
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for business and marriage. “Working together has allowed us to spend a lot of time at the office,” Kristi explained. “We joke that it gives us a competitive advantage; anyone who isn’t married to their business partner can’t possibly spend as much time at work and keep a spouse. But seriously, we can accomplish a lot when we are both fully committed to the same goal, which is seeing Kiva succeed.” Together, Kristi and Scott are able to put running a successful business at the top of their priority list, while not allowing their marriage to become neglected as a result. c
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The Hemp Revolution Hemp could replace fossil fuels as a form of energy by Jasen T. Davis
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or centuries humanity has used energy sources such as gasoline, coal and even thermonuclear power as a resource, but we have done so at a tremendous cost to the environment. As global warming and the occasional atomic meltdown take their toll on the world, many scientists and researchers are investigating cheaper, more renewable and safer alternatives, including hemp. Since the dawn of time people have burned wood to stay warm, cook and create steam for power. Cutting down trees, however, eventually leads to deforestation and devastated animal habitats. Trees can usually be harvested every 10 years, but industrial hemp has a growth cycle of just three months, allowing farmers to cultivate it faster. Wood pellets made of compressed shavings and dust have been used as a source of fuel for a very long time. According to Jim Pillsbury, a cultivator of industrial hemp in Framingham, Massachusetts who is working with a Canadian biomass research facility to develop a hemp alternative to wood pellets, the process also requires no pesticides and is therefore less harmful to the environment. Biomass power plants generate electricity from turbines driven by steam from burning wood pellets, regular wood or even plant material, such as hemp. The steam can also heat buildings and be used for manufacturing. Instead of burning biomass, other means like chemical decomposition and all-natural, biological digestion can be used. According to Klara Marosszeky, an Australian researcher studying the science of biomass generators, hemp is the solution. “The biomass
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If we raised hemp on six percent of the land in the U.S., we could provide all of the fuel we need for power generation and transportation. it produces is the equivalent to a similar area of forest [per year], but it’s produced in a four month period of growth,” Marosszeky said in an interview with ABC News, Australia. Since hemp grows faster, cleaner and requires no fertilizers, this process is far less harmful to nature than using processed, cut-down trees. Supercapacitators made of graphene help batteries store electricity. Creating graphene takes time, and it harms the environment, since factories have to use chemicals and metal compounds for the process. Professor David Mitlin, a scientist working at New York’s Clarkson University, has led a team of researchers in creating a supercapacitator made of hemp carbon fibers. These creations are not only three times more efficient than their metallic counterparts; they are also less harmful to the Earth to build. Mitlin has created a company called CQuest Partners, LLC to manufacture these superior supercapacitators, complete with hemp-derived electrodes and lead a green industrial revolution using hemp to do it. Paul Bobbee is a Canadian hemp
farmer who owns Bifrost Bioblends, a proposed biodiesel plant he hopes will someday generate hemp diesel fuel capable of powering automobiles. After ending up with a surplus of hemp seed one year, Bobbee converted 5,300 gallons of hemp seed oil into a sweet-smelling, slightly greenish fluid capable of fueling a diesel engine. Fortunately, such an engine already exists. Grayson Sigler owns Hemp Car Transamerica, a company that successfully converted a 1983 Mercedes-Benz 300 DT station wagon’s engine into a machine capable of reaching 27 miles per hour on the highway. All his company did to convert the engine was replace the hoses within the vehicle with stronger ones capable of handling the hemp diesel fuel’s slightly heavier viscosity. Does it seem strange to think that we could use hemp to power just about everything we need to run around and live in America? Sigler doesn’t think so. In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, he said, “If we raised hemp on six percent of the land in the U.S., we could provide all of the fuel we need for power generation and transportation.” c
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Industry Insider
Legalization without criminal justice isn’t progress. It’s not reform. It’s dressing up prohibition in a way that allows people who are chosen to profit off of people who use it.
Explicit Entrepreneur Journalist Charlo Greene fearlessly pushes through legal battles while launching web series by R. Scott Rappold
“F
*ck it. I quit.” If you’ve ever worked at a job in your life, you’ve probably thought those words. Maybe they were even on the tip of your tongue. But most of us just suck it up and go on working; we have bills to pay, after all. And then there’s what Charlo Greene did. In 2014, while working as a television journalist at an Alaska station and delivering a report on cannabis, she quit on-air with those four words and walked out of one life
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and into another. The clip went viral on the internet but the world soon forgot about Greene. The Alaskan authorities however did not, and Greene is facing trial this fall on charges stemming from a raid on the Alaska Cannabis Club, the medical cannabis facility she had surreptitiously launched while working as a journalist and to which she devoted her life after quitting. Greene could face decades in prison if she is convicted. The threat of prison has not silenced her voice. In fact, green has since moved to California and launched a daily cannabis newscast
on YouTube, The Weed Show. Rather than ending her journalism career, the famous on-air resignation led Greene closer to her true calling—helping people and fighting for an issue that is close to her heart. “A lot of people assume I was pissed off at someone. That wasn’t at all the case. That was in fact my favorite job I have had to date,” said Greene, whose legal name is Charlo Egbe. “What would have been more self-serving for me would have been to hang onto this career as opposed to pursuing the mission that I got into it for, which was to help people.” >>
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Journalist to Activist
Greene, who grew up in Alaska, had only been working at KTVA for nine months, but she had become the go-to correspondent for anything and everything cannabis. The state was voting in 2014 on whether to join a handful of other states in legalizing recreational cannabis, and Greene traveled around the state and to other states that had passed legalization, reporting on the issue. She was no stranger to cannabis, being a recreational consumer since college, but she was still shocked and saddened as she learned what obstacles Alaskans seeking medical cannabis had to face. Though it had long been legal for medicinal purposes, the state never created a system for patients to obtain cannabis. She even met one patient in her 70s whose doctor had suggested she stroll through back alleys looking for a dealer. “Just hearing those stories, it made sense that I use the platform I had to help this community of people, especially up in Alaska, where we had legalized it but hadn’t created any sort of structure for these patients to get medicine. This was why I became a journalist,” she said. Journalistic impartiality be damned, she went one step further and opened the Alaska Cannabis Club, where patients could meet other patients and share cannabis. For six months, she balanced a 10-hours-a-day job and being “the secret cannabis lady.” She was even writing press releases for the club, sending them to the TV station and then covering the story, knowing it would get her fired instantly if the bosses found out. A few weeks before the vote on legalization in the fall of 2014, Greene decided to quit in her very dramatic fashion, hoping it would draw attention to the issue. “I decided to use my exit as a way to draw as much attention to the vote. Knowing I was kamikazeing my own career over this, I wanted to make use of my exit to achieve what I set out to do, which was legalize cannabis in Alaska and make
medical marijuana real for all of the patients I serviced,” she said. Greene traveled the state stumping in favor of legalization, and on November 4, the state that had once elected Sarah Palin as governor voted to legalize recreational cannabis by a 53-47 margin.
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Uncertain Future
After the vote was certified, Greene reopened her club, which she described as “a private patients association.” She told CULTURE she thought she was operating under the law, based on her extensive interviews with state and local authorities about what would be allowed under the new legislation. Authorities felt otherwise, and the club was raided in 2015, with a show of force worthy of a takedown of a Colombian cartel. “I was shocked they would use drug war-era tactics, like the battering ram, the 12 armed, masked officers in SWAT gear, coming in and putting guns in everyone’s faces,” she said. Even worse, she later learned she was being charged with enough felonies to send her to prison for 54
years. She has pleaded not guilty and strongly believes authorities targeted her because of her public support for legalization. Her case, she said, exposes the flaws of Alaska’s legalization efforts. “We learned afterwards it was more commercialization versus legalization. We definitely did it the wrong way, otherwise I wouldn’t be in the position I am,” Greene said. “Legalization without criminal justice isn’t progress. It’s not reform. It’s dressing up prohibition in a way that allows people who are chosen to profit off of people who use it.” While awaiting trial, Greene has since moved to California, which after the 2016 election is ground zero of cannabis legalization. In late 2016, she launched The Weed Show to provide a daily visual news source on all things cannabis, with subjects ranging from “How to Grow 25 Pounds of Weed a Day” to “Weed and Sex” to “End the War On Us.” She has also launched a line of skin care products, CBD Body and Beauty. In a way, Greene has come full circle. And she has no regrets about anything, despite the pending trial. “I honestly don’t know what I could have done differently, what I would do differently,” she said. “It just sucks, the position I’m in now.” c
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culture growing RECIPES UNKNOWN
by Ed Rosenthal
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started preparing my two-part spring garden in April. The first part was a group of four plants that I was given as small, rooted cuttings. I transplanted them into 6” containers shortly after I received them and had them growing under continuous light from a 400-watt LED for about three weeks. Then I moved them into my small greenhouse. Two weeks after that the roots left their cramped quarters and had filled the container for roomier quarters in fivegallon containers where they doubled in size. Now healthy and thriving, I give the plants four hours of early morning light with 320-watt induction fluorescent lights for about four hours. At 10 a.m. they are carried outside and are placed in the sun close to a wall that reflects the sun back at them. Later in the day that area becomes shady,
so the plants are moved again to another section of the garden that becomes sunny in the afternoon. Then, around 6 p.m. they are placed back in the greenhouse and receive supplemental light until 8 p.m. To keep the plants from flowering and to have them respond quickly when I change the cycle to flowering in late June, I break up the dark period periodically. At night the plants receive light from two four-foot fluorescents for two minutes every hour from 9 p.m. until 5 a.m. I accomplished this using a repeating two-dial timer. Sometimes I use plants to test pesticides, so I had a group of plants tested and after the tests were over, they were neglected. There they were, sitting in a tent with lights shining but no water for several weeks. By the time I remembered that they were still there, they were three-quarters dead. I decided to try to save them. First I gave them
some water and started bringing them outside during the day. The next week I set them up in the new moveable space they are now sharing. I’ll describe it from bottom to top. It starts with a moving dolly. A half-inch thick piece of plywood 2’ x 4’ was secured with screws. A rope was attached to the plywood on one of the narrow sides so the unit can easily be pulled. A 9” deep 2’ x 4’ horticultural tray set up with wick systems made from 3/8” braided nylon rope was placed on the dolly. Then I filled it with a mixture of enriched potting soil, coir fiber and homemade compost from kitchen waste and plant material consisting mostly of oak leaves. Next I set the longsuffering plant in place. The two larger plants were placed sideways in the tray with the roots that were at the bottom of the container against the tray side buried half way with the other half
TIP OF THE MONTH Perhaps you or someone you know has some plants that are flowering and are ready to be picked. If some vegetation is left on the plant at picking, and if it is given continuous light, it may regenerate to grow another crop. Feed it vegetative fertilizer, not flowering fertilizer.
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making a mound. Each of the root mounds was then covered with half a potting container cut with a small electric saw. The plants’ stems were long enough to leave the center of the tray bare. That’s where I planted the three small specimens, upright. These plants have a regimen similar to the other plants. They spend evenings in a little tent that is lit with 200 watts of fluorescent lights, then they are wheeled out to spend their days basking in the sun. It’s been a little more than two weeks since they were transplanted and the sideways plants have made the adjustment. They’ve come back to life. c
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The greenhouse plants near the wall get sunlight directly.
In the greenhouse the plants get light in the late afternoon and early evening.
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The plants in the unit are basking in the sun.
The plants wheeled into the tent to have cozy nights and a bit of light.
You can see by the dead leaves that these plants weren’t doing well. They are making a good recovery.
Copyright by Ed Rosenthal. All rights are reserved. First North American Magazine rights only are assigned to culture Magazine. No other reproduction of this material is permitted without the specific written permission of the author/ copyright holder.
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Time to Go: June Weather: High 70s, low 50s Budget: $$$$$
if you go:
Pleasantries in Paris With all the blooming flowers and warm weather, Paris softens in June— especially for the millions of cannabis enthusiasts in the City of Light. Yet, June is also the month when Paris feels like it is just starting to rev up for summer’s spirited outdoor energy. Truly, visiting Paris in June is a delight, with the temperatures in the 70s and the throngs of summer tourists not yet at maximum level. This is when locals get out of their tiny apartments and start relaxing as the city’s music, arts and summer festival scenes are jam packed full of some of the year’s best plein air concerts and events. Plus, many cannabis-loving Parisians are still celebrating the win of France’s new President Emmanuel Macron. Although he does not fully support legalization, Macron did promise to ease France’s restrictive possession and smoking laws. This means the French’s “smoke-but-don’t-tell” philosophy not only still applies, but gives medical cannabis patients ever more courage to be forthright about their cannabis consumption. Where do you stay when visiting one of the most expensive cities on the planet?
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Paris hotels can be costly—especially in spring and summer—so millions of visitors to the City of Light choose to live like a local and rent an apartment or rent a living space through online marketplaces and hospitality services. However, renting apartments and living spaces through websites like Airbnb can be dicey. Remember to ask any host in Paris about important details such as noise levels both day and night as well as things most Americans take for granted such as more than one toilet, dishwashing machines and laundry facilities. One of the coolest happenings in Paris this June is the now annual We Love Green Festival, which features folk, pop and electronica music. Held on June 10-11, this year’s eco-friendly We Love Green Festival takes place in the Bois de Vincennes. Rock to the sounds of Cali-French music artist and cannabis activist April King on June 6 for an evening of transcendental hiphop, house and astral jazz featuring French jazz sax master Julien Lourau at the stylish Club Rayé. c
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Paris is home to approximately 1,803 historical and contemporary monuments and over 150 museums. 1
The famous bell that sits atop Notre Dame Cathedral is so heavy that it weighs over 13 metric tons. 2
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There are a total of 10 Statues of Liberty in France, five of which are located in Paris. 3
With France’s new President Emmanuel Macron campaigning to soften cannabis laws, cannabis culture in Paris seems set to get even more enjoyable. C’est vrais: Any form of cannabis is illegal to grow, possess, smoke or ingest, but Parisian authorities mostly look the other way (as long as you consume respectfully and nowhere near police stations, hotels, boutiques, restaurants, cafés, monuments and the like). Also remember, French consumers predominantly smoke hash mixed with tobacco rather than pure flowers. Traditional European spliffs are almost always mixed with tobacco (and sometimes straw), so buyer beware. Still can’t find any meds while in Paris? Use your nose. If you smell it, ask a friendly bartender, musician or just take a stroll along the Seine River. You are more than likely to run into some consumers enjoying a spliff on a warm spring evening with a view of Notre Dame Cathedral.
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Mia Jane
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Age: 30 Condition/Illness: IBS, anxiety and depression. Using Medical Cannabis Since: I have been using medical cannabis since around the time I moved to Denver in 2010.
Why did you start using cannabis? Before coming to Colorado, I was very sick. Being so ill, I was unable to hold down a job, or take care of myself. After years of invasive tests, unsuccessful medical advice and growing frustration with my current doctors, I knew I had to seek out something besides pills and the current therapeutic options for my conditions. When I moved to Colorado, I was searching for another way to get better and actually feel better. I adopted a healthier lifestyle, but incorporating cannabis into my self-care regimen was something that made the most noticeable difference. Did you try other methods or treatments before cannabis? I was prescribed an alarming amount of medications from the time my depression and
anxiety began in my teens to my early 20s, when my stomach problems really developed. Being put on numerous cocktails of Rx medications with intense and scary side effects that sometimes were worse than the symptoms was a life I didn’t want to live. I knew I had to find other options, and now I’m happy to say I’m seven years prescription-free. What’s the most important issue or problem facing medical cannabis patients? That’s a tough one—there are a lot of important things going on in our government and our community that we need to be aware of as cannabis patients. The one that sticks out the most to me right now is the home grow caps being enforced, and the people who are suffering because of it. What do you say to folks that are skeptical about cannabis as medicine? People who are still skeptical about this plant’s medicinal qualities need only look to what’s happening here in Colorado. There are people’s lives being changed. Families are moving here with children that are sick beyond hope, and they are finding relief with this plant. People with illnesses of all kinds from PTSD to Parkinson’s disease are finding relief with this medicine. c
Are you an MMJ patient with a compelling story to tell? If so, we want to hear from you. Email your name, contact information and details about your experiences with medical cannabis to courage@ireadculture.com.
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culture
recipes by Keira Fae
Menu: Stuffed Bell Peppers Lemon Bundt Cake Strawberry Lime Smoothie
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Chromatic Cuisine
While we await the official start of summer later this month, let’s not forget that “June gloom” can still turn dreams of warm outdoor barbecues into cozy evenings indoors. While the overcast gloom that typically comes with the beginning of this month is drab and gray, there are plenty of ways to liven up your kitchen and your mealtime with these beautifully bright and healthy recipes. Embrace the lively reds of a strawberry smoothie, the radiant greens and oranges of stuffed bell peppers and the sun-bright yellows of a tangy lemon bundt cake. Add a bit of THC or CBD to each dish, and this summer menu will allow you to feel refreshed and ready to tackle the summer fun without being weighed down.
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Directions:
Stuffed Bell Peppers 10mg of THC per pepper Ingredients: 4 bell peppers (any color) 4 tablespoons of olive oil
1 medium zucchini, finely diced
8 teaspoons of Pot d’huile cannabis-infused olive oil t
4 Roma tomatoes, seeded and finely diced
8 ounces lean ground beef (90:10)
1 cup cooked rice
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper 1 onion, finely diced
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1 cloves garlic, chopped
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1 teaspoon paprika 1 cups grated pepper Monterey Jack cheese
Preheat the oven to 350˚ degrees F. Cut the tops off the peppers, finely chop the pepper tops and set aside. Scoop out the seeds and membrane. Place the peppers in a baking dish large enough to hold them upright, cut side up. On medium-high heat, heat the 2 tablespoons of infused olive oil in a large skillet. Add beef and season with salt and pepper. Cook beef for 8-10 minutes. Remove to a paper towel lined plate to get rid of the excess fat. Wipe skillet with paper towel and add the remaining 2 tablespoons of infused olive oil. Add chopped onion and chopped peppers, 1 to 2 minutes. Add garlic and zucchini and cook for another minute. Add the seeded tomatoes and season with salt, pepper and paprika. Cook until everything is heated through and has softened. Add beef and rice. (Season more if you’d like.) Stir in 1/2 cup of pepper Jack cheese. Turn off the heat once melted. Fill the peppers to the tops each sprinkled with remaining 1/2 cup of pepper Jack. Pour a small amount of water into the bottom of the baking dish and drizzle 1 teaspoon of infused olive oil on top each filled pepper. Cover with foil and bake for 30 minutes. Uncover peppers and bake to an additional 10-15 minutes or until peppers are soft. Let cool and serve. t Additional recipe can be found at iReadCulture.com
SERVES
8-10
Lemon Bundt Cake Each ~ 40mg of CBD, per slice 4-5mg CBD Ingredients: Cake:
Icing:
1/4 cup lemon juice
1 cup powered sugar
Lemon zest
1/2 cup milk
4 eggs
1 teaspoon lemon juice
SERVES
2
2 cups sugar 1/2 cup CBD infused butter (40mg CBD) t
Candied Blueberries:
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 egg white
1 cup blueberries
1 1/2 teaspoon vanilla 3 cups flour 1 cup milk Directions: Preheat oven to 350˚ F. Add the butter and 2 cups of sugar into a large mixing bowl. On medium speed, blend the mix until smooth. In a separate bowl add the flour, baking powder and salt, and mix well. Set aside. Once the sugar and butter are mixed, add the eggs one-by-one, milk, vanilla, lemon juice and lemon zest. Add the flour in 1/2 cup increments. Once the batter is smooth pour it into a bundt cake pan and bake it in the oven for 40 minutes, or until it is golden brown. While the cake is baking, it’s time to candy the blueberries. In a small bowl add egg white, cover each blueberry in egg white, coat in sugar and let dry. In a medium bowl and powdered sugar and milk, mix until smooth. Add lemon juice and mix well, then set in fridge. Once the cake is golden brown, let sit until cool, stir the cooled icing and pour over top of bundt cake, add candied blueberries and enjoy!
Strawberry Lime Smoothie Each ~ 10mg of THC per serving Ingredients: 1/2 cup 2 percent milk (can use coconut or almond milk) 2 tablespoons infused coconut oil (20mg THC) t 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
2 cups fresh strawberries, halved 1 cup vanilla yogurt (substitute favorite flavor) 2 tablespoons honey 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon (optional)
Directions: In a blender, combine all ingredients; cover and blend until smooth. Pour into chilled glasses. Serve immediately. Don’t forget the garnish!
Legal Disclaimer Publishers of this publication are not making any representations with respect to the safety or legality of the use of medical marijuana. The recipes listed here are for general entertainment purposes only, and are intended for use only where medical marijuana is not a violation of state law. Edibles can vary in potency while a consumers’ weight, metabolism and eating habits may affect effectiveness and safety. Ingredient management is important when cooking with cannabis for proper dosage. Please consume responsibly and check with your doctor before consumption to make sure that it is safe to do so.
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Chuck Shepherd's
News of the
Weird
LEAD STORY—TRAINING DAY u A June 2016 police raid on David Jessen’s Fresno County (California) farmhouse caused a $150,000 mess when sheriff’s deputies and Clovis Police Department officers “rescued” it from a trespassing homeless man— with the massive destruction leading to Jessen’s lawsuit announced in March. The misdemeanant helped himself to an ice cream bar, some milk and half a tomato, but was otherwise “unarmed”; however, by the time the police standoff ended, the “crime scene” included more than 50 cop cars, a SWAT team (and backups), two helicopters, standby ambulances, a police robot and a crisis negotiation team. Windows, walls and wrought-iron doors were destroyed; tear gas and a “flash bomb” were employed. (Jessen suspects that the farmhouse’s isolation enticed police to decide that it presented an excellent training opportunity.) COMPELLING EXPLANATIONS u “Pro-choice” activist Jessica Farrar, a Texas state legislator, introduced a bill in March to create consistency between the state’s rigorous regulation of women’s reproductive functions and those of men (regulation which, by the way, in either case she calls “invasive” and “unnecessary”). Because Texas’s anti-abortion laws highlight “procreation” as a crucial government interest, she believes male 38
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use of erectile-dysfunction drugs should be regulated as abortion is. Under her bill, individual use of Viagra or similar drugs must be preceded by “counseling” similar to that required by abortion laws, and since male masturbation involves the “wasting” of precious sperm cells, it, too, would require “beforehand” counseling. CRIME REPORT u At a time of growing awareness that some people seem almost addicted to their cellphones and instant 24/7 communication, police in Brookfield, Wisconsin, released surveillance photos of a woman in the act of robbing banks on March 25 and 27—while standing at teller counters and talking on the phone during the entire episodes. Acting on a tip from the photos, police arrested Sarah Kraus, 33, on March 28. u College activist Pablo Gomez Jr., 22, was arrested in Berkeley, California, in March and charged with the brutal stabbing death of an elementary school teacher. Gomez, a senior at University of California, Berkeley, is well-known on campus for insisting on a gender identity for which (as an example) the pronoun “he” is an inappropriate reference. (Hence, “they” was charged with what is so far the only homicide in Berkeley this year.) u Paul Perry Jr., 39, sound asleep behind the wheel of his car, with motor running, at 6 a.m. on April 2, was in no position to talk his way out of a DUI ticket, but did offer a gentle challenge to the Youngstown, Ohio, police officer. Several times, according to the police report, Perry offered to “thumb wrestle” the officer to get out of the ticket. From the report: “Perry was advised officers would not thumbwrestle him.”
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