Feb. 2023 - California Leaf

Page 1

THE CULTURE ISSUE

INDEPENDENT CANNABIS JOURNALISM SINCE 2010 #34 | FEB. 2023 THE ENLIGHTENED VOICE FREE / LEAFMAGAZINES.COM CALIFORNIA
CHEECH AND CHONG LEAF NATION'S BOBBY BLACK & MIKE RICKER INTERVIEW THE STONER COMEDY ICONS EXCLUSIVE
LEAFMAGAZINES. COM ADVERTISE IN THE FLOWER ISSUE! LIMITED SPACE STILL AVAILABLE EMAIL NATE@LEAFMAGAZINES.COM TO GET YOUR AD IN THE MARCH 2023 FLOWER ISSUE OF THE LEAF! CALIFORNIALEAFMAG CALIFORNIA LEAF MAGAZINE #CALIFORNIALEAF
CALIFORNIA 4 FEB. 2023 [ issue #34 THE culture ISSUE 07 EDITOR’S NOTE 08 NATIONAL NEWS 10 LOCAL NEWS 12 SHOP REVIEW 14 EDIBLE OF THE MONTH 16 CONCENTRATE OF THE MONTH 18 COOKING WITH CANNABIS 20 STRAIN OF THE MONTH 24 CHEECH AND CHONG 28 STONIEST MUSICIANS 30 BOX BROWN’S COMICS 32 ARTS & CULTURE TASTEMAKERS 36 CANNTHROPOLOGY 38 STONEY BALONEY COURTESY 28 HIGH NOTE THE STONIEST MUSICIANS AND THE MESSAGES BEHIND THEIR CANNABIS INDUSTRY BRANDS 36 CANNTHROPOLOGY BREAKING DOWN THE LEGENDARY SESH THAT CHANGED THE WORLD: THE TIME BOB DYLAN GOT THE BEATLES HIGH, FOREVER ELEVATING THEIR MUSICAL JOURNEY. COURTESY EMILY EIZEN BOBBY BLACK / JEAN-MARIE PERIER 32 ARTS & CULTURE TASTEMAKERS FROM STREETWEAR TO GLASS ART, THESE ARE SOME OF THE HOTTEST STONER CREATIVES. RAYMOND W HOLMAN JR MESSAGE IN A BOX THE LEAF CHATS WITH PROLIFIC COMIC ARTIST BOX BROWN ON HOW COMICS REMAIN ESSENTIAL. 30 BOBBY BLACK BRUCE WOLF SHOP REVIEW THE OUTPOST SANTA ROSA VALENTINE’S DAY 12 18 COOKING WITH CANNABIS FEATURE p. 24 | Leaf Nation’s Bobby
Ricker chat with the iconic stoner comedians on their newest roles. CHEECH AND CHONG
Black and Mike

License: C12-0000296-LIC

• IG: @Hashandflowers

• Email: trinityalpsfarm

NORTHWEST LEAF / OREGON LEAF / ALASKA LEAF / MARYLAND LEAF / CALIFORNIA LEAF / NORTHEAST LEAF

ABOUT THE COVER

Our magazines this month feature incredible photos of the iconic stoner comedy duo that has graced our screens for decades: the inimitable Cheech and Chong, who are back and bigger than ever with new careers, new lines and new roles in an expanding network of Cannabis entrepreneurial spirit and ascent. Our sincere thanks to legendary photographer Emily Eizen for taking on this assignment and delivering a remarkable portfolio of portraits, and the Cheech and Chong team for their help in fully realizing this truly epic cover shoot. See more photos from their photo sesh on our website, and see the alternate cover too!

COVER & INTERIOR PHOTOS BY EMILY EIZEN @EMILYEIZEN

WARDROBE AND STYLING BY TORENO WINN @TORENO__ LOCATION BY THE PINK DONA @THEPINKDONA

ART DIRECTION BY DANIEL BERMAN @BERMANPHOTOS

WES ABNEY CEO & FOUNDER wes@leafmagazines.com

MIKE RICKER OPERATING PARTNER ricker@leafmagazines.com

TOM BOWERS CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER tom@leafmagazines.com

DANIEL BERMAN CREATIVE DIRECTOR daniel@leafmagazines.com

BOBBY BLACK STATE CONTENT DIRECTOR bobbyblack@leafmagazines.com

NATE WILLIAMS SALES OPS & DISTRIBUTION nate@leafmagazines.com (415) 717-6985

O’HARA SHIPE ONLINE EDITOR ohara@leafmagazines.com

MEGHAN RIDLEY COPY EDITOR meghan@leafmagazines.com

Editor’s Note

Thanks for picking up The Culture Issue of the Leaf!

This month’s cover is graced by Cheech and Chong, the iconic stoner humorists who’ve represented Cannabis culture since 1971. Crossing generations with comedy and electric screen presence, they pioneered the plant at a time when using Cannabis was highly illegal. With today’s access to pot stores verging on excessive, it’s easy to forget the risk that buying weed represented in the ‘70s – let alone smoking joints on camera in a form of public protest and entertainment.

CONTRIBUTORS

WES ABNEY, FEATURES

DANIEL BERMAN, PHOTOS

BOBBY BLACK, DESIGN + FEATURES

JOSHUA BOULET, ILLUSTRATION

TOM BOWERS, FEATURES

AMANDA DAY, FEATURES

EMILY EIZEN, PHOTOS

STEVE ELLIOTT, NATIONAL NEWS

MATT JACKSON, FEATURES

ALEXA JESSE, FEATURES

SARA MILLS-GAINES, SALES

JESSE RAMIREZ, DESIGN

MIKE RICKER, FEATURES

MEGHAN RIDLEY, EDITING

MIKE ROSATI, PHOTOS

NATE WILLIAMS, PHOTOS + REVIEWS

TORENO WINN, STYLING

BRUCE WOLF, PHOTOS

KATHERINE WOLF, FEATURES

We are creators of targeted, independent Cannabis journalism. Please email us to discuss advertising in the next issue of California Leaf Magazine. We do not sell stories or coverage. We can offer design services and guidance on promoting your company’s medicinal, recreational, commercial or industrial Cannabis business, product or event within our magazine and on our website, leafmagazines.com. Email nate@leafmagazines.com to start advertising with California Leaf!

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Cannabis culture spread into the mainstream on the silver screen, rebranding the war on drugs with wit and taking the fear out of the weed equation. In many ways our current version of stoner culture can be defined by the vibe that Cheech and Chong created atop the echoes of the ‘60s hippie renaissance. Go to a weed event today and you’ll see plenty of tie-dye mixed in with friendly folks blending of all cultures, backgrounds and socioeconomic status. But while colorful clothes and glass define the look, the only thing needed to join the plant tribe is a smile and a bowl to smoke.

We’re entering the ‘Goldilocks Age’ of legalization: Icons and individual consumers alike remember the scars and costs of prohibition. A new generation of stoners turn 21 each month in a world where dispensaries are as ubiquitous as liquor stores. It’s magical to see the worldview of Cannabis shifting –bringing youthful energy and hope which has lit a fire that cannot be put out.

Reaching escape velocity, Cannabis is slingshotting from criminal activity to vending machines in a lifetime – and its effect on the arts, entertainment and larger world, shouldn’t be underestimated.

“IT’S MAGICAL TO SEE THE WORLDVIEW OF CANNABIS SHIFTING –BRINGING YOUTHFUL ENERGY AND HOPE WHICH HAS LIT A FIRE THAT CANNOT BE PUT OUT. ”

As I wrote last year – if Putin were puffin’ – he probably wouldn’t have invaded Ukraine. I believe we will see a radical transformation in global politics and humanity’s view of responsibility for one another, and our shared planet, once the plant is free to heal. Just look at Thailand’s seemingly overnight drug policy change: Weed has gone from a death penalty offense to a scene of international press, as a Cookies dispensary opens to the blessings of monks and the community.

The energy is right for this movement to grow. And perhaps that’s what brought Cheech and Chong back together, and to the forefront of the movement they planted seeds for 50 years ago. We certainly need weed heroes and while they’re far too cool for capes, it’s an honor to share their presence on the cover of Leaf Magazines. Please enjoy our cover interview by our own Bobby Black and Mike Ricker, with amazing photos by Emily Eizen styled by Toreno Winn in Los Angeles, and the rest of our unique Culture Issue. As I’ve said since June 2010 when the first Leaf magazine went to print – thank you for reading and for being a part of our beautiful Cannabis culture!

-Wes Abney

7 leafMAGAZINES.com ESTABLISHED 2010 THE ENLIGHTENED
VOICE
Exclusive Cannabis Journalism Have a strain, product, or news tip that the California Leaf staff needs to know about? Email bobbyblack@LeafMagazines.com!
LAURIE WOLF, RECIPES
WES ABNEY

LARROQUETTE WAS PAID IN WEED FOR ‘TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE’

John Larroquette’s very first acting gig was to provide the opening narration for Tobe Hooper’s 1974 ”Texas Chainsaw Massacre.” The actor did so as a favor, but a popular internet rumor has long claimed he also received a little weed for his troubles. While speaking with Parade, Larroquette confirmed the weed rumor as “totally true.“

“He gave me some marijuana or a matchbox or whatever you called it in those days,” Larroquette recalled. “I walked out of the [recording] studio and patted him on the backside and said, ‘Good luck to you!’”

Larroquette returned to provide narration for several of the “Texas Chainsaw Massacre movies,” including the recent Netflix sequel – but he revealed that he’s never actually seen any of them. “I’m not a big horror movie fan,” he said.

TENNESSEE DEMS WANT TO LEGALIZE

IFnew legislation passes this session, Tennessee could become the 22nd state to legalize the adult use of marijuana.

Sen. Heidi Campbell is one of the co-sponsors of the Free All Cannabis for Tennesseans Act – or FACT Act. “We know already that it’s popular across the state and across parties,” Campbell said, reports New Channel 5 Nashville. “People are already going across state lines to get Cannabis products.”

“In 2018, an MTSU poll showed 81% of Tennesseans support legalization in some form. To drill down, 37% say marijuana should be legal for adult use and 44% say it should only be legal for medicinal use.”

In 2018, an MTSU poll showed 81% of Tennesseans support legalization in some form. To drill down, 37% say marijuana should be legal for adult use and 44% say it should only be legal for medicinal use.

Sen. Campbell believes if people are already using Cannabis, Tennessee should be getting its share of the tax revenue. “We’re missing out on billions in revenue every year that could be put towards education, rehabilitation, mental health and all kinds of things that surround Cannabis,” she said.

NEW YORK CITY HOME TO 1,300 UNLICENSED POT SHOPS

ACCORDING TO THE NYPD, more than 1,300 illegal marijuana stores are selling pot without a license.

“I admit, I don’t think we ever talked about this scenario happening,” State Senator Liz Krueger said.

Senator Krueger worked on the state’s adult-use Cannabis legislation for about seven years, but admits that lawmakers never expected such an expansive untaxed market to pop up while the legal market was still being rolled out.

IS LEGAL CANNABIS COMING TO HAWAII? NEW BILL OFFERS HOPE.

HAWAII LAWMAKERS in January filed bills to legalize marijuana in the state. Advocates are optimistic that the reform may finally be enacted with a new pro-legalization governor in office.

Rep. Jeanné Kapela (D) and Sen. Chris Lee (D) sponsor the legislation in their respective chambers, alongside more than a dozen co-sponsors. The measures were partly informed by the recommendations that a state legalization task force developed last year.

“We now have a roadmap for legalizing recreational Cannabis in our islands.”

“We now have a roadmap for legalizing recreational Cannabis in our islands,” Kapela said. “Legalizing Cannabis is not just a matter of money, it is a matter of moralities.”

NEBRASKA SENATOR BACKING MMJ BILL

A Nebraska senator is kicking off the start of the new session with another attempt to finally legalize medical marijuana in the state.

Sen. Anna Wishart, a Democrat, has been fighting to enact the reform over the past several years – pursuing medical marijuana legalization through both the state legislature and activist-led ballot campaigns.

Now she’s filed a new bill to provide patients with qualifying conditions access to Cannabis if they receive a doctor’s recommendation. It appears to largely mirror a revised version of legislation that advanced in committee in 2021, but ultimately stalled out in the GOP-controlled unicameral legislature.

Should the legislation make it over the finish line, smoking marijuana and home cultivation would remain illegal.

months of probation is the sentence for Super Bowl champion Nigel Bradham after felony marijuana convictions.

U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS BREAKS NEW GROUND

global he U.S. Virgin Islands in late January legalized marijuana for adults 21 and older. This means the United States-owned territory joins several nations in the conservative Caribbean in finally relaxing their antiquated Cannabis laws.

T“We are bringing the opportunities to you, but you must also do your part to seize these opportunities,” said Governor Albert Bryan. Under the nascent industry, the cultivation, manufacture and sale of marijuana is legally allowed in the U.S. territory.

The Act improves upon the governor’s original proposal, with the inclusion of a robust social equity program and expansion of the expungement opportunities for marijuana-related arrests and convictions.

“Under the nascent industry, the cultivation, manufacture and sale of marijuana is legally allowed in the U.S. territory.”

During a signing ceremony, Bryan also issued a proclamation that allows persons convicted of simple possession of marijuana to apply for a pardon.

HEALTH & SCIENCE

DISPENSARY GIVES OUT FREE AUTHORIZATIONS FOR TEXAS VETERANS

Military veterans across the country struggle with PTSD and other ailments, and many are trying to find available treatment options. For some, rather than taking prescription medications, they’re opting for medical Cannabis, reports KXAN.

In Austin, goodblend – one of only three medical Cannabis operators licensed to operate in the Lonestar State – is giving away free Texas medical marijuana authorizations to veterans.

“these authorizations can cost between $200-$300.”

According to goodblend community relations manager Terrence Baugh, these authorizations can cost between $200-$300.

“It keeps them off the black market,” he said. “We want to make it very accessible and usable for them to be a part of this program – to energize and engage them in what Texas already has.”

percent of American voters now support the federal legalization of Cannabis.

patients are enrolled in Georgia’s long-awaited medical marijuana program, yet to be rolled out.

FEB. 2023 leafmagazines.com 8 national news STORIES by STEVE ELLIOTT, AUTHOR OF THE LITTLE BLACK BOOK OF MARIJUANA THE NEWS IN BRIEF
12 marijuana dispensaries will be allowed in Northampton, Mass. according to newly imposed rules capping the number.
30 pounds of actual Cannabis were seized by police at a South Carolina CBD store. 20
cops
after a traffic stop
Lafayette, Louisiana. 27
pounds of marijuana was discovered by
in January
in
65
25k
HOLLYWEED
THE SOUTH

Thailand Welcomes Cookies With Cultural Spectacle

Electric, emphatic excitement filled the room on that Saturday morning in Bangkok, as Berner and a tight crew of partners and friends anxiously awaited what was about to happen.

After spending a week immersed in Thai culture, following months of preparation and work, Berner and his team were about to unveil Cookies Bangkok –the first store in Asia for the San Francisco-based brand.

“It’s the next chapter of our business,” Berner said, sitting in the VIP green room while the fans gathered outside. “It’s the elevation of the brand. It’s the biggest compliment to our work. It’s absolutely amazing, to be honest with you. I’m super fired up. It’s kind of hard to take it all in right now.”

Sitting next to Berner, Josh Schmidt, co-owner of Natura in Sacramento, let everyone know to wait for the pounding drums, which would be the signal that it was go-time. A former Bangkok resident with familial and professional connections in the country, Schmidt has dreamed for years of having a legal Cannabis business in Thailand.

When the opportunity came to partner with his longtime friend Berner on the endeavor, he happily stepped in to act as an integral “bridge” for the brand – pulling together the stakeholders

on the endeavor and finalizing the details.

“It’s a dream come true,” Schmidt said.

“It’s something that I’ve been thinking about for a long time, and there’s no one better than this guy right next to me to extend the best brand in the world, and the best knowledge of Cannabis, to a country that’s so devoted to agriculture and so kind-hearted. … I’m so happy to be here with my brother.”

At that point, Berner interjected.

“Don’t let him downplay it; he manifested this shit,” Berner said.

“He’s been telling me we’re gonna do this for a long time. I never pictured it, never envisioned it. But when you get here on the ground and see it, you actually feel it. This guy’s had that vision for a long time, and I’m glad that he convinced me to come this far, because, shit, it’s a life-changing experience.”

Mere moments later, the ceremonial drums started pounding.

Berner and his team emerged into the bright Thai sunlight, welcomed by a throbbing throng of revelers overflowing out onto the street from the Cookies Bangkok courtyard. The opening festivities included ceremonial dancing, music, and Muay Thai fighting demonstrations both inside the shop and out in the courtyard (check

out the videos on our Instagram @californialeafmag).

Cookies devotees and major industry players flew from all over the globe to be here for this moment, and everyone was inhaling it deeply.

Karim “Luka Brazi” Butler and Alexis Major, the husband-and-wife team behind Cookies collaborator Gumbo Brands, flew out from New York to show support and soak in the spectacle.

“As a Cannabis brand partner of Cookies, we’ll go to the end of the earth for our culture and for our fans,” said Major, who is the CFO of Gumbo Brands. “As well as support Berner, who has given us the opportunity to grow global as he expands into 22 states across America and 15 countries around the world. Cookies will have our support for every single one.”

The ceremony lasted all afternoon, as a continuous line of customers steadily streamed through the shop, and people bought up the merch and the opening lineup of strains.

East Coast rapper David “Dolo Money” Stockton took the long-haul flight from Baltimore via Los Angeles and Tokyo to attend the event and get some Thai facetime with Berner.

“This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to see the official opening of Cookies Asia in Thailand,” Dolo Money said. “To be at this opening is something I could not miss for the world. Cookies itself is the flagship of Cannabis. It’s the Louis Vuitton of Cannabis. You gotta support the best.”

For many locals in the Thai Cannabis community, the arrival of California-based Cookies symbolizes both a legitimization of the newly-legalized industry in what was a harshly punitive prohibitionist country, as well as the realization of their long-held dreams.

“Having Cookies in Thailand makes all the hard work that I have put in to help legalize Cannabis in Thailand worthwhile,” said Tom Kruesopon, founder of Golden Triangle Health, a Thai partner in Cookies Bangkok. “It makes everything real.”

“It’s the elevation of the brand. It’s the biggest compliment to our work,” Berner said.

“It’s absolutely amazing, to be honest with you.

Soranut Masayavanich, a charismatic and well-connected player in the Thai scene whom everyone knows by the name Beer, is the CEO of Sukhumweed Industries and Local Growers Only. He worked with the Thai Parliament to help craft the legalization legislation and will be working with the Cookies team to supply locally-grown Cannabis for the brand.

I’m super fired up. It’s kind of hard to take it all in right now.”

“For 10 years, I focused on one thing,” he said. “As hard as things got, I focused on one thing. And now Berner is here. I’m going to supply his weed. … Cookies is here. Thailand is safe now. Weed is actually legal in Thailand.”

10 STORY & PHOTOS by TOM BOWERS @CANNABOMBTOM/CALIFORNIA LEAF FEB. 2023 leafmagazines.com international news
LEFT: Cookies Bangkok partner Tom Kruesopon poses with Thai dancers at the Cookies Bangkok store opening. RIGHT: Berner cuts the ribbon on Cookies Bangkok with his Thai partner Joe Thawilvejjakul of Great Earth International. Read the full story and discover more of our coverage of the newly legal Thailand Cannabis market on leafmagazines.com, and find exclusive videos and photos from the day @californialeafmag.
THE FLOWER ISSUE! Affordable advertising available now! email nate@leafmagazines.com for details on including your brand and company in the March 2023 Flower Issue! CALIFORNIALEAFMAG CALIFORNIA LEAF MAGAZINE #CALIFORNIALEAF
ROSN
HONEYBUTTER

THE OUTPOST

Owned and run by a group of legacy operators – including most notably, Drew Coggio and Eliot Papas of Green Dawg and Purple Star MD owner Victor Nguyen, among several others – The Outpost is not as large or flashy as some of the other dispos in the area. Rather, the shop is big on offering a friendly, low-key experience and enough selection to give its customers a variety of great options without the overwhelming shelves. Focused on curating a unique menu with a price point for everyone, the shop’s manager/buyer, Curtis Ducart, aims to balance the shop’s offerings.

“We want to be competitive and compassionate –not overpriced and trying to make every buck we can,” he tells us.

The Outpost offers an array of ways to save and stock up, including daily happy hours and specials (such as Solventless Sundays and Shatterday Saturdays), and monthly promos like flower BOGOs and brand-specific deals.

To that end, The Outpost offers an array of ways to save and stock up, including daily happy hours and specials (such as Solventless Sundays and Shatterday Saturdays), and monthly promos like flower BOGOs and brand-specific deals. They even welcome first-time customers with a 20% discount on their order.

When deciding which brands to feature, Ducart focuses primarily on local and legacy companies –vetting each one thoroughly.

“A lot of them are local or based out of Sacramento, which is where I’m from,” Ducart explains. “I’ve been buying for almost 10 years now, so I’m familiar with a lot of these brands and have connections with them. I try to highlight legacy producers instead of brands that are just jumping into the game … to support the good

FEB. 2023 leafmagazines.com 12
Located in an unassuming business park in the Bellevue neighborhood of Santa Rosa, The Outpost is a clean and classy little pot shop that specializes in quality flower and solventless concentrates. First opened in April 2021, it’s one of Sonoma County’s newest dispensaries – but its pedigree dates back over a decade.
shop review

people who have been doing this for a long time.”

It’s these relationships that’ve led to 50 or so different brands, including Connected Cannabis Co., Doja, 710 Labs, Turtle Pie, Blueprint, Fig Farms, Panacea and of course, Green Dawg, to adorn the shelves at The Outpost. Many of these legacy companies, in turn, also support the shop – particularly when they hold events in the parking lot outside (such as the one they hosted during Hall of Flowers last October).

“We throw a lot of events out here, and when we do, we get a ton of support from cool legacy brands that come out and have a lot of fun with us,” says Ducart. “We have vendors set up booths outside, we usually do food and DJs, and we allow people to consume outside. Because you know – no one wants to come to a weed party they can’t smoke at.”

According to Ducart, city officials have been “standoffish” when it comes to consumption issues – but their neighbors don’t seem to mind.

“Our neighbors are great,” he says. “We always make sure that we’re very open with them about what we’re doing, and they usually come out to join us – get some food, hang out and everything.”

For Ducart, these events are just a natural extension of the shop’s philosophy.

“The goal of The Outpost for me, since I took over the shop, is really to keep Cannabis culture alive here,” he explains. “I feel like many dispensaries are a little stagnant and uptight, but we like to have fun – we just want everyone to have an enjoyable experience and leave happy.”

REVIEW & PHOTOS
@THEBOBBYBLACK/CALIFORNIA LEAF THE OUTPOST 335 Ohair Ct, Suite A, Santa Rosa, CA outpostsantarosa.com | @outpost_santarosa (707) 757-5756 | Open 10AM - 9PM Daily
by BOBBY BLACK

Functional Edible Trio

QUEEN MARY

THE LINEUP consists of a tincture high in THCV and infused with coffee extract and Vitamin D, a strawberry lemonade gummy made with full spectrum rosin, rhodiola and Vitamin B12, and a lavender blueberry gummy with full spectrum rosin and CBN.

Their Elixir Boost tincture is high in THCV, which is found in heavy concentration in cultivars like Durban Poison and often provides an energizing, clear-headed and focused effect. Vitamin D is also known to boost concentration levels and has a laundry list of benefits ranging from anti-inflammatory to immune health. Combining THCV with Vitamin D and a coffee extract, the Elixir Boost tincture is a perfect addition to any morning routine.

Queen Mary’s Enchanted Strawberry Lemonade gummies recently took home third place in the hotly-contested Gummies category at the 2022 Emerald Cup. These treats are infused with nano-enhanced Cannabis oil, so they are absorbed by the body in 15-20 minutes for most users, and are made with full spectrum rosin for a balanced and well-rounded effect. The flavor is absolutely delightful, bursting with juicy strawberry notes and backed by a touch of herbal Cannabis flavor. Each gummy is 10mg –just enough to take the edge off and help you transition into your afternoon responsibilities without

The Moonstruck Lavender Blueberry gummies are just the trick to help you round out your day and wind down for a relaxing night’s sleep. They perform as advertised – doing a fantastic job helping calm the body and mind.

Why weed your way through the endless sea of gummies when you could work your way through the day with this masterful lineup from Queen Mary? These finetuned formulations are a trio of highly flavorful and functional products that get the job done, and we’re here for it.

14 EDIBLE OF THE MONTH NATE WILLIAMS @NATEW415/CALIFORNIA LEAF
QUEENMARYBRAND.COM @QUEENMARY_LA 10MG THC + 3MG THCV PER SERVING 10MG THC PER SERVING
Queen Mary has entered the California market with intention and focus, launching with three complementary products designed to be used in conjunction and as a daily regimen.

HONEYBUTTER ROSIN CO.

PURPLE LAMBO LIVE HASH

Purple Lambo is a rarely seen cultivar from Exotic Genetix featuring parentage of their in-house bred Triple OG and the legendary Purple Urkel. This 73-159u live hash was extracted from Camp Phiya’s greenhouse and living soil grown flowers by the seasoned professionals at Honeybutter.

The terps on the Purple Lambo are both loud and incredibly nuanced, boasting a complex bouquet that displays notes of lavender, freshly-cut papaya, grape musk, rosewater and yuzu – a lot going on with multiple layers of aromatics to let your nose enjoy.

After allowing the hash to grease, it’s plenty pliable and can be manipulated into an appropriate-sized dab with relative ease. Alternatively, you could dump out a small amount of hash in its freshout-of-the-fridge beach sand consistency onto parchment paper, and then press it out into a dabbable sheet with your fingers – but this particular hash has a high enough terpene content to grease up into a beautiful and sticky, ready-to-dab puck.

An extra-low-temp dab reveals a beautiful orchestra of flavors. It surprisingly leads with a classic, fuel-and-funk driven

OG profile (which is really fun and unexpected since the OG is nowhere to be found on the nose) and then quickly develops into a hashy, grape hookah meets fresh-cut flowers dipped in gasoline type of flavor. Exquisite!

This hash is mastery on display and lives up to its Purple Lambo moniker. From the breeding to the selection, cultivation, harvesting and hashing, it was clearly done with the utmost care and intent to bring forth a beautiful, headstash-worthy resin that you bust out when you want the proverbial “good stuff” – or you’re looking to impress company.

“The terps on the Purple Lambo are both loud and incredibly nuanced, boasting a complex bouquet that displays notes of lavender, freshly-cut papaya, grape musk, rosewater and yuzu...”

HONEYBUTTERROSINCO.COM

FEB. 2023 REVIEW by NATE WILLIAMS @NATEW415/CALIFORNIA LEAF | PHOTO by TOM BOWERS @CANNABOMBTOM concentrate of the month 16 leafmagazines.com
@HONEYBUTTER_ROSIN_CO @EXOTICGENETIX_OFFICIAL @CAMP_PHIYA
If you’re sick and tired of the current trends in flavor profiles, this Purple Lambo Live Hash –crafted by Honeybutter Rosin Co. and made from material grown by Mendocino County’s Camp Phiya – will surely scratch your itch for something different.

CHOCOLATE MAKES US HAPPY

DOES CHOCOLATE MAKE YOU HAPPY? Wait, let me answer that: Yes, it actually does. Dark chocolate has significant health benefits, both mental and physical. In fact, the darker the better is a significant source of antioxidants and lowers blood pressure. Chocolate also boosts serotonin levels, which helps with depression. It’s like what Cannabis does … although Cannabis does it better!

Fun to make and easy to eat, there is an infused chocolate bark out there for everyone.

CHOCOLATE BARK SERVES 9

1/3 cup unsweetened coconut flakes

2 cups dark chocolate chips or melts

3 tablespoons canna butter

1/2 cup chopped pecans

1/2 cup chopped dried apricots

When I first became a Cannabis lover, my favorite treat was sitting in front of the record player, listening to cool music and eating, from the container, a healthy serving or two of “cool and creamy pudding.”

CHOCOLATE PUDDING

SERVES 4

1/2 cup sugar

3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder

1/4 cup cornstarch

1/8 teaspoon salt

2 3/4 cups milk

2 tablespoons canna butter or oil

2 teaspoons vanilla

1. In a saucepan, combine the sugar, cocoa, cornstarch and salt. Add the milk. Heat on medium. Bring mixture to a boil and stir constantly until the pudding coats the back of the spoon.

2. Remove the pan from the heat, and stir in the infused butter and vanilla. Divide between glasses. Chill.

CHOCOLATE CANNA CLUSTERS

MAKES 36 CLUSTERS

Creamy, crunchy and chewy, and the tender raisins add a touch of sweetness.

1 1/2 cups chocolate chips

3 tablespoons canna-butter or canna-coconut oil, melted

1 cup toasted slivered almonds

1/4 cup chopped cherries

1. In the top of a double boiler, heat the chips with the canna butter. When fully melted, add most of the almonds and cherries, stirring to blend.

2. Place a piece of parchment on your work surface. Drop the mixture, by the tablespoon, on the paper. Sprinkle the still-not-set clusters with the remaining almonds and cherries. Allow to set for 60 minutes.

1. In a small, dry skillet, toast the coconut flakes. 2. In the top of a double boiler over simmering water, melt the chocolate with the canna butter. Mix well. 3. Place parchment on your work surface. Turn the chocolate onto the paper and form a 5x7 inch rectangle. 4. Combine the coconut with the pecans and apricots. Sprinkle the toppings on the just-poured chocolate. Allow to set until completely dry, at least an hour.
FEBRUARY HASHTAGS | #Love #BeYou #DontFearTheEdible #EatYourCannabis
18 FEB. 2023 leafmagazines.com RECIPES by LAURIE WOLF @LAURIEANDMARYJANE for LEAF NATION | PHOTOS by BRUCE WOLF @BRUCE_WOLF COOKING WITH CANNABIS

VELVET N°5

CULTIVATED BY ROYAL KEY ORGANICS

20 leafmagazines.com FEB. 2023 STRAIN OF THE MONTH

SIX HUNDRED AND NINETY-NINE PLANTS. That’s how many testers Velvet N°5 had to beat out in order to become part of Royal Key’s newest strain collection. As owners Josh and Erin told us, “When you’re dealing with that many potential stars, it’s the outliers that tend to stand out.” In this case, a deep berry aroma first broke this off from the pack – solidifying its place by having a doughy and fuel-forward flavor which showed the most depth of the six keepers that survived the hunt.

Along with hitters like Riddles and Gomishi, Velvet N°5 highlights the company’s work using Exotic Genetix’s Red Pop (Strawberry x Cookies n’ Cream) – this time crossing it with another stunner from the E.G catalog: Cake Mix (London Pound Cake x Wedding Cake). The smell has notes of currant, new car upholstery, and berries that are just starting to ferment. It’s that departure from the strawberry-scented crowd that pulled Velvet out of the testing garden and into production.

Naming this new selection was actually a twist of fate. While traveling down the coast with samples, they titled the jar “VEL5” – an homage to the code on the plant’s state-required track-and-trace tag. When it came time to land on a title, their brains had already been playing ‘Words With Friends’ for weeks.

The name also reflects its layered flavor, which morphs from sweet to doughy without ever losing its smooth, mellow exhale. What starts with a dry pull that’s all Berry Bubble Yum, switches gears to a rich, smoky flavor without ever missing a beat.

What makes this strain so impressive is the care with which it’s grown. Royal Key maintains living soil beds teeming with organisms and partner plants to create a diverse, natural environment for them to thrive. The process is both time and labor intensive, but for this husband and wife team, the increase in quality from growing this type of Cannabis far outweighs getting a few less pounds per year.

In the small, but ever-evolving scene of indoor, living soil Cannabis, Velvet N°5 hits a high note. With its standout complexities in flavor and eye-popping appearance, it’s a tasty top-shelf treat you’re encouraged to enjoy.

CALIFORNIA
EMAIL BOBBYBLACK@LEAFMAGAZINES.COM
REVIEW by MATT JACKSON @ACTIONMATTJACKSON for CALIFORNIA LEAF | PHOTO by TOM BOWERS @CANNABOMBTOM HAVE A LEAD ON SOME SERIOUS FIRE?
“WHAT STARTS WITH A DRY PULL THAT’S ALL BERRY BUBBLE YUM, SWITCHES GEARS TO A RICH, SMOKY FLAVOR WITHOUT EVER MISSING A BEAT.”
ROYALKEYORGANICS.COM @ROYAL_KEY_ORGANICS
THCA | 25% THC
CANNABINOIDS
TERPENOIDS
27%
30%
2.2%
@ RAYS INFUSED LEMONADE FOLLOW US Marijuana products may be purchased or possessed only by persons 21 or older. This product has intoxicating effects and may be habit-forming. Marijuana can impair concentration, coordination, and judgment. Do not operate a vehicle or machinery under the influence of this drug. There may be health risks associated with the consumption of this product. For use only by adults 21 and older. Keep out of reach of children. Learn More
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24 leafmagazines.com feb. 2023 THE CULTURE ISSUE

still smokin’

THE REBIRTH OF CHEECH AND CHONG

Legendary Cannabis

LONG BEFORE Harold and Kumar, Jay and Silent Bob or Beavis and Butt-Head … before “Friday” or “How High,” “Half Baked” or “Pineapple Express” –there were the founding fathers of Cannabis comedy: Cheech and Chong.

In a series of irreverent films throughout the 1970s and early ‘80s, they portrayed a pair of silly, stereotypical stoners who perfectly captured the spirit of the ’70s and established them as cultural icons that have stood the test of time. During this exclusive interview with the Leaf, the legendary comedy duo reflect back on how their partnership has evolved over their heady and hilarious, half-century-long careers.

WHEN CHEECH MET CHONG

A Mexican-American from Los Angeles, Richard Marin (nicknamed “Cheech” as a baby by his uncle, who remarked that he looked like a little “chicharron” aka fried pork rind), grew up the son of an LAPD officer in East L.A. An anti-war activist in college, he moved to Canada after graduation to avoid being drafted, where he spent about a year working odd jobs: making pottery, delivering carpets and freelance writing.

“I was writing for a rock and roll magazine up there called Poppin, and the publisher said to me, ‘I got this guy you should meet – he’s doing some weird stuff,’” Marin recalls.

“That guy” was a half-Chinese, half-Scotch-Irish musician from Calgary named Thomas Chong. Throughout the 1960s, Chong made a living managing nightclubs around Vancouver while trying to make it big as the guitarist in a band called Bobby Taylor & the Vancouvers. The group signed with Motown in 1965, released an album and a hit single (which Chong co-wrote), and even played with top acts like the Jackson Five and Jimi Hendrix.

In 1967, while on tour in Chicago, he happened onto the Second City comedy club and was “mesmerized” by his first exposure to improv. So when he was fired from the band after being late to a gig (because he didn’t have a green card), Chong switched gears: In 1969, he took over the back room of his brother Stan’s strip club, The Shanghai Junk, and launched his own improv group called City Works.

Then, one fateful day, after delivering a carpet next door, Cheech walked into the club and introduced himself to Tommy. As Marin’s publisher predicted, the two immediately hit it off.

“He was running this improvisational theater troupe in Vancouver’s first topless club, and he invited me to join,” says Marin. “I started out

writing for the group but eventually started doing all the parts. Eventually, when the troupe fell apart, Tommy and I stayed together.”

When asked what inspired him to become a comedian, Marin jokes: “The strippers!” then adds sarcastically, “It was either that or go into politics.” CONTINUES NEXT PAGE >>

INTERVIEW by BOBBY BLACK @THEBOBBYBLACK & MIKE RICKER @RICKERDJ/LEAF NATION | PHOTOS by EMILY EIZEN @EMILYEIZEN | STYLING by TORENO WINN @TORENO__
comedy duo Cheech and Chong are back – and this time, they’re finally making a new movie together!

THE REBIRTH OF CHEECH AND CHONG

POTHEAD PERSONAS

It was while doing sketch comedy at Shanghai Junk that the two aspiring comics began developing the stoner characters that would become their trademarks: Cheech, the Chicano vato “Pedro,” and Chong, the burnout known only as “Man” – a character he based mainly on a homeless hippie named Strawberry (a name they later appropriated for Cheech’s shellshocked cousin in their first film) that he sometimes let sleep in the lighting booth at the club. Though neither of them smoked as much as the bumbling burnouts they played on stage, they’d both loved Mary Jane since their first dance with her in their late teens.

“I was 19, in my first year at college,” Marin recalls of his first time getting high. “I was a straight arrow: altar boy, choir boy, straight-A student … and then one time at a party in my apartment, my roommate passed this cigarette to me. ‘What is this?’ ‘It’s weed, man.’ ‘Oh, OK – how do you do it?’ He showed me how to do it, and after I took my first hit, the music sounded better, and I said to myself, ‘OK – so what else have they been lying about?’”

It was a similar circumstance for Chong.

“I was 17 years old, still trying to get through high school,” he recounts. “I used to hang out at this jazz club because even though I didn’t play jazz, I could get in free if I brought my guitar. One night, the owner of the club – a Chinese bass player named Raymond Ma – handed me a Lenny Bruce record and a joint. I put the joint right in my pocket, so he said, ‘Oh, OK’ and lit up another one, and we got high. I remember the music I was listening to when it hit me was “Lonely Woman” by Ornette Coleman. I’d never heard music like that. I could even see the woman in the window waiting for her lover.

After I got home, I listened to the Lenny Bruce record, and the next day, I quit school.”

“I THINK OUR PARTNERSHIP IS BETTER TODAY THAN IT EVER WAS,” MARIN SAYS CONFIDENTLY. “I THINK EVERYTHING CHANGED WHEN WE GOT OUR OWN ACCOUNTANTS,” JOKES CHONG, THEN ADDS MORE SERIOUSLY, “NO, BUT WE … WE GREW UP.”

The duo spent a little over a year honing their material, and after City Works disbanded in February 1971, they toured down the West Coast back to Los Angeles – where their pothead personas were better received than in Vancouver.

“The audience back in L.A. liked those characters right away because we reminded them of people in their neighborhood,” says Chong. “You know, because they didn’t have Chicanos in Canada.”

FLYING HIGH

Later that year, they signed a record deal with famed producer Lou Adler’s Ode Records and recorded eight albums over the next several years – most of which went gold and were nominated for Grammys – including 1972’s “Big Bambu” (designed to look like a giant pack of rolling papers) and 1973’s “Los Cochinos,” which won them their first and only Grammy.

In 1978, Adler directed the duo’s first feature film: the now classic “Up in Smoke.” Much like their live act and albums, most of the movie’s dialogue was improvised – reportedly using only a yellow legal

pad with what Chong once described as a “loose roadmap” written on it as their guide. Though not well received by critics, the film was wildly popular with hip, young audiences and became a huge financial success.

In the decade to come, the duo went on to release seven more films, including “Nice Dreams” (1981), which featured cameos by Paul “Pee-wee Herman” Ruebens and LSD guru Timothy Leary, and “Still Smokin” (1983) – a combination of sketches and live performances shot mainly in Amsterdam.

“I wanted to do a Cheech and Chong film festival, but Paramount wanted us to do a live concert,” Chong explains. “Eddie Murphy had just done “Raw,” so they wanted us to kind of copy that.”

“So we did both instead,” Cheech chimes in.

Of all of their films, Chong admits that “Still Smokin” was his favorite one to make.

“I think ‘Still Smokin’ was the most fun because we did quite a few classic bits, like ‘The Invisible Wrestler’ that we had only done live, and I knew we’d never do again,” he explains. “I figured, this is our one chance to see our live act on screen, so we did – we got ‘em on screen.”

“And it was in Amsterdam,” Cheech chuckles, “so we had a great time.”

BREAKUP & REUNION

Despite their fun times during filming, tensions had been rising between them for some time. Their sixth film, “The Corsican Brothers” (1984) – in which they played 18th-century French swashbucklers instead of their usual stoner characters – flopped. And Chong, who had directed four of their six films, was reportedly exerting ever more control over the team’s creative direction. Sadly, in 1985, things came to a head – and Cheech and Chong decided to split up.

For the next two decades, each pursued their own solo career: Appearing in dozens of films and television shows, as well as countless cameos and voiceover roles (including several animated Disney characters). And though their friendship had severely soured during that period, it managed to endure.

“We’d talk, but it was intermittent because there were a lot of bad feelings on both our parts,”

26 leafmagazines.com feb. 2023 THE CULTURE ISSUE
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE

Cheech says. “But I always knew that we’d eventually get back together in some form, because the connection was just too strong, and the people wanted it so much.”

It took over 20 years (and a generous offer from Live Nation), but that reunion finally happened in 2008, when they put their differences aside and agreed to embark on a new standup tour, “Light Up America.”

“It was a nice way to get back with Tommy in a format that we didn’t argue about,” says Marin, who joyously recounts the first time they shared a stage again. “He said, ‘I’m doing this gig with my wife Shelby at The Comedy Store down in San Diego … why don’t you just show up and come out of the audience as a special guest,’ and that’s what I did. It was amazing – we had no rehearsal whatsoever, but it’s such a part of our DNA that after all those years being apart, I walked up on stage and it was like we had performed the day before.”

The “Light Up America” tour was followed by the “Get it Legal” tour, a concert film and an animated movie. There was even talk of them doing a new feature film together – something like a stoner version of “Grumpy Old Men” – but that project never materialized, thanks to some of the same creative differences that first drove them apart.

Putting aside their past issues, though, both men feel that the dynamics of their relationship have improved significantly since then.

“I think our partnership is better today than it ever was,” Marin says confidently.

“I think everything changed when we got our own accountants,” jokes Chong, then adds more seriously, “No, but we … we grew up.”

HEADY HORIZONS

Their reconciliation has paved the way for three exciting new projects. The first is their new Cheech and Chong’s Cannabis Company launched in California in August of last year – which not only brings their individual, existing weed brands (Cheech’s Stash and Tommy Chong’s Cannabis) under one banner, but introduces several new “joint” product lines named after aspects of their films, including Love Machine, Low Rider, StaDank-Ohh, and their most popular release, Cruise Chews.

The second project is an upcoming documentary about their careers that’s recently wrapped filming after decades of work.

And the third? That long-awaited new feature film, which they say is already written and set to begin filming within the next few months. When asked what it’s about or whether they’ll be reprising their

classic stoner characters in it, the duo is uncharacteristically tight-lipped.

“We can’t talk too much about it because we don’t want to give anything away,” says Chong. “All we can tell you is that it’s going to be incredible. We got some surprises, man.”

Although they haven’t made a film together in decades, they’re confident that they’ll be able to connect with today’s younger audience — particularly Chong, who’s portrayal of Leo in “That ’70s Show” introduced his classic character to a whole new generation (a role he’s recently reprised in the new sequel, “That ‘90s Show”).

“The zoomer generation, they love the old Woodstock, peace and love mindset … and when you go back to the ‘oldies but goodies’ types, we’re at the top of the list,” says Chong. “Because when you think about it, really what we were doing was young guys playing like old guys. And so now, we’re old guys playing young guys.”

“We have a unique brand of humor that’s simultaneously really dumb and really smart in the same thing,” Marin offers. “It appeals to everybody on the intellectual spectrum at the same time.”

“Yeah – we’re kinda like Charlie Chaplin,” Chong adds. “He was a clown who became the lowest common denominator in American culture, and as a result, everybody could look down on him. But he could hobnob with the richest or the poorest – it didn’t matter. And I think that’s what’s happened with Cheech and Chong. When we first did it, it was shocking – but eventually, we showed the world how a Chicano and Hippie could be very lovable, and that connected everybody to us.”

So if you happen to be one of those rare stoners who have never actually seen a Cheech and Chong movie, do yourself a favor – go get as high as possible and watch “Up in Smoke.” You’ll be glad you did.

CHEECHANDCHONG.COM | @CHEECHANDCHONG

Location by The Pink Dona | thepinkdona.com @thepinkdona

See more exclusive photos on our website at LeafMagazines.com.

INTERVIEW by BOBBY BLACK @THEBOBBYBLACK & MIKE RICKER @RICKERDJ/LEAF NATION | PHOTOS by EMILY EIZEN @EMILYEIZEN | STYLING by TORENO WINN @TORENO__
“WE HAVE A UNIQUE BRAND OF HUMOR THAT’S SIMULTANEOUSLY REALLY DUMB AND REALLY SMART IN THE SAME THING,” MARIN OFFERS.
Cheech and Chong’s iconic 1978 film “Up in Smoke” made the pair stars. (ALAMY STOCK)

As one of the first celebs to sink their teeth into the legal landscape back in 2015, Leafs by Snoop came out of Colorado and a partnership with Canopy Growth. He continued to solidify his colossal status in Cannabis with Casa Verde, an investment company with a deep client deck ranging from edible and cultivation companies to media and METRC. These days, the Doggfather is digging into Death Row Cannabis – a brand new endeavor with renowned Cali cultivator AK.

Cookies began as a clothing and lifestyle line but Berner had bigger plans. He cornered a cultural shift in the community, impacting everything from branding to breeding and paving a path to a billion-dollar empire. Now, his brands boast nearly 60 retail locations around the globe, where Cookies and sister brand Lemonnade partner with local producers in each area to cultivate their Cannabis products.

HIGH NOTES

Taking hits and making hits with the stoniest folks in music.

Musicians have been humming a melody to Mary since someone strummed the first guitar. But these days, a shifting legal landscape means artists can make money getting loud in more ways than one. A bounty of branding opportunities brought a wave of celebrity-backed Cannabis companies and (love it or hate it) new ones are cropping up regularly. But not all celeb brands come from seasoned supporters. Let’s highlight a few hit makers with a legacy of lighting up long before legalization.

B-Real

Stoniest Album

“Black Sunday”

Cypress Hill is synonymous with the sesh. B-Real has backed the bud since day one of his career and since 2018, he’s been busy bringing Dr. Greenthumb to life. The aptly-titled dispensary chain has stuck close to its L.A. roots, with five California locations and its own brand of in-house cultivation (Insane) powered by the same TRP LLC crew that has its hands in Cookies and Death Row Cannabis.

wiz khalifa

Wiz’s 2010 mixtape “Kush & Orange Juice” seemed to solidify a place in many toker’s tracklists and inspire a new generation of cultivar-curious consumers.

method man

“Kush & Orange Juice”

Khalifa Kush (KK) is rumored to have been Wiz’s personal puff of choice for years before his endeavor to brand the bud. But in 2016, he entered the market debuting a partnership with Tryke Companies under the fan-famous strain name. The brand has since expanded to include a full lineup of infused offerings that spans six states.

Stoniest Album

“Tical”

As a group, Wu-Tang wove a legendary part of hip-hop’s history. Clan members like Method Man had a masterful presence in more than just music. Cult classics like “How High” cemented his place in the po(t)ulation and inspired terms like “TICAL.” It’s a term Mr. Meth coined for Cannabis that, since 2020, has doubled as an acronym for his brand’s vision: Taking Into Consideration All Lives. You can find the full line of flower and infused goods in six states.

28 leafmagazines.com feb. 2023 THE CULTURE ISSUE
“The scientifical, mystical one. Growin’ my crops with the rays of the sun.”
“Look up in the sky, it’s a bird, it’s a plane. It’s the Funk Doctor Spot smoking buddha on a train.”
“And I’m gonna re-up as soon as the fire’s gone. Smokin’ OG Kush from another time zone.”
Stoniest Album snoop dogg Stoniest Album “Mac + Devin go to High School”
“Can we get a motherfuckin’ moment of silence for this small chronic break?”
berner
Stoniest Album
“Hempire”
“Light it up, what it taste like? Lemonade, when it’s made right.”

Stoniest Album

“Worldwide Underground”

erykah badu willie nelson

Her eccentric style, soulful songs, and free-flowing artistic expression exude an unmatched energy. But Badu’s bringing a bit of her vibe to viewers like you, in her latest creative collaboration with the folks at Cookies. A recently released video on Berner’s page shares a conversation in which the pair look forward to the lemony traits of “That Badu” – the company’s very first female-backed brand featuring Mad Cow Genetics.

DAMIAN MARLEY

Stoniest Album

“Stony Hill”

mendo dope

Stoniest Album

“Heroes”

To nearly no one’s surprise, Willie Nelson was not far behind Snoop in securing a multi-state operation when things began to legalize back in 2012. Willie’s Reserve spread through several states with rapid succession, sharing flower, pre-rolls and carts grown by over 20 independent farms in Colorado, Washington, Oregon and California. Like Berner, Willie looked to his community to spread the plant’s promise, pairing up with fellow country stars like Merle Haggard and Margo Price.

Jr. Gong jumped into the ganja scene with the social justice-oriented company, Evidence. The brainchild of Ocean Grown Extracts, Evidence operates out of a Coalinga, California facility that makes focusing on their mission mandatory. That’s because the former prison now plays home to plants grown with purpose, as Evidence has partnered with The Last Prisoner Project to donate one dollar from every bag sold. But Damian is no stranger to this cause and has acted as an LPP advisor since 2019.

GRIZ

Michigan EDM artist GRiZ isn’t a stranger to the sensi and by 2017, he’d already released a self-titled strain. His bright, saxed-up, musical makings set the stage for any solid sesh. If you’re in the state of Michigan, you can even tune in and toke up with something selected by the man himself. Pure Options, an established local brand has partnered with GRiZ to provide four custom cultivars for his latest flower enterprise: Astro Hippie.

Stoniest Album

“Planters of the Trees”

Mendo Dope is about as grassroots as our list gets. Brothers Old E and Bleezy started their Cannabis culture journey back in 2013, frequently filming in their own California garden or with the late legendary breeder Subcool for YouTube. They built a fan following and since then, have had their hands in everything from community growing classes to a seed company (Planters of the Trees) and flower line (Mendo Dope Farms).

margo price

Stoniest Album

“All American Made”

Margo Price’s strain with Willie’s Reserve isn’t the only reason this Tennessee toker has made our list. Listen to “All American Made” (a song title that now doubles as a strain) a little closer and you’ll catch her calls to Reagan’s War on Drugs. For a country singer/ songwriter, she’s surprisingly candid about her Cannabis use. Recently, she’s even announced an edible endeavor with the independent, family-owned-and-operated Illinois company Nature’s Grace.

slightly stoopid

The stony, summer sounds of Slightly Stoopid pair perfectly with their sub-brand of curated “Cannabis, wellness, and spirits.” Stoopid Strains offers several Cali Cannabis collaborations with established companies for a variety of products. Seabright Farms’ “Stoopid Hammerheads” offer fans a flower, diamond, oil and kief-coated pre-roll. But the band also collaborated with Cali companies Space Coyote Cannabis and Humboldt Seed Company, as well as Washington’s Playa Grande Cannabis.

STORY by AMANDA DAY @TERPODACTYL_MEDIA for LEAF NATION
“Chasing the Golden Hour Pt. 3”
“Gettin’ high and havin’ fun.”
“A shifting legal landscape means artists can make money getting loud in more ways than one.“
“You’re the prettiest of flowers, girl me can’t complain. When I’m with you I feel so high I rise above the rain.”
“So I took it in my hand and headed home to grow this ‘juana. I put it in the soil and became a ganja farmer.”
“But I was just a child, unaware of the effects. Raised on sports and Jesus not the usual suspects.”
“No explanation needed. When I’m high I don’t conceal it.”
Stoniest Album “Chronchitis”
“And we would ride around the park ‘til it’s after dark. Pumpin’ the trunk with the windows rolled up, puff.”
“Roll me up and smoke me when I die.”
Stoniest Album

message in a box

Brian Box Brown takes on the Cannabis industry using the power of comics.

“IWOULD TRAVEL for my book tours and go to legal dispensaries,” Brown said. “My first one I went to was in Seattle, and I was just like, ‘This is amazing.’ Because at that time in Philly, I was buying ounces off the same dude for a long time. You’d have a couple of strengths to choose from, maybe – just whatever he had. But going into a dispensary, I was like, ‘Holy shit, there’s so much fucking shit everywhere.’ I was so thrilled I couldn’t even handle it. I still remember that. It’s intoxicating.”

Brian “Box” Brown wants to change the face of the regulated Cannabis industry. But the Philadelphia artist isn’t trying to accomplish that goal by running for office or starting a CannaPac – he’s using the power of the comic strip. Coming up in the world where every city had multiple alt-weekly newspapers publishing numerous comics, he saw himself sliding into the scene next to legends like Tom Tomorrow and Tony Millionaire. The New Jersey native started making comics in 2005, just before the alt-weekly newspaper scene started its downward spiral. So, he took his strips to book form. His first book, “Andre the Giant,” released to huge acclaim in 2014 – landing him on The New York Times Best Seller List. It wasn’t until his “Andre” book tours that Brown, a long time Cannabis user who was arrested for possession as a teenager, saw the opportunity to make a change in Cannabis.

The experience inspired him to get his medical card after his usual supplier dried up and Philly launched its medical market. But the experience wasn’t the same.

“I go in there and I’m like, it’s not the same as that feeling as when I went to the dispensary years before in Seattle because there’s no choices, really,” Brown said, adding that the Cannabis was also more expensive in the dispensary than on the traditional market. “You’re like, dude, I’m paying out the ass now for weed, and what am I getting out of it? A lot of packaging. A lot of mids. And I was like, what is wrong with this?

Why is it so shitty here and not as shitty in other places? What is different? That’s what got me radicalized.” He wanted to make a difference but didn’t know how. He started off by yelling at people on Twitter, which wasn’t very effective. So he created a series called “Legalization Nation” and pushed it out on Instagram.

“I was like, I know how to make comics,” Brown said. “This is maybe one way that I can contribute to this discussion in a meaningful way where people might, rather than just making tweets and yelling at regulators or whatever … something might happen.”

30 leafmagazines.com feb. 2023 THE CULTURE ISSUE

His comics use sardonic wit and efficient delivery to tackle points of interest to Brown – things he believes need to be covered. It’s been working. “Legalization Nation” has been picked up for syndication by King Features, part of Hearst Media, and he’s currently prepping to release a coloring book called “A Visit to the Cannabis Farm: A Coloring Book for Adults.”

“There’s something about comics that when you break down stuff into small chunks, break down a story into small pictures – there’s something about it that draws the reader in and allows them to take in information in a way that’s less taxing, or seems less stressful than reading a wall of text,” Brown said.

“I would say that when you want really important information to get out there, put it in comic form. That’s exemplified on the airplane in the seat in front of you – there’s a card that tells you how to get out of the airplane if there’s an emergency, and it’s a comic series of illustrations telling you what to do.”

“I feel like that’s what I’m trying to do with the strip,” he added. “Make the safety card from the airplane, but about weed. Because this is really important information.”

PHOTOS
RAYMOND
JR. @RAYMONDLOVE2PHOTO for LEAF NATION Legalization Nation © 2022 Brian Box Brown, Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
by
W HOLMAN
BOXBROWN.COM @BOXBROWN
“I was like, I know how to make comics,” Brown said.
“This is maybe one way that I can contribute to this discussion in a meaningful way where people might, rather than just making tweets and yelling at regulators or whatever … something might happen.”

Arts & Culture Tastemakers

Defining Cannabis culture can be difficult. As the plant continues gaining acceptance, new crowds discover weed every day, moving the goalposts as we fold into one big, ever-growing hashball. What was once an isolated subculture now bubbles into every corner – pushing the artists and makers in our communities to the forefront of art, design and fashion.

edie parker

Bright colors, bold shapes, and products that strive to evoke a sense of happiness – that’s the formula that helped Brett Heyman and her brand Edie Parker become labeled as the Coco Chanel of luxury weed.

Since expanding her upscale accessory and home goods brand into the Cannabis space, they’ve released thoughtfully designed smokeware, including products with NY artists like Paul Arnhold and Sticky Glass. In 2019 they worked with Emjay to put out a line of flower in California and Barney’s on supplying their high-end head shop in Beverly Hills. This last year, they launched Weedie Parker Creative to help newer companies establish compliant branding.

EDIE-PARKER.COM | @EDIE_PARKER

One of the most prolific makers/artists operating on the scene today, GZ1 – whose brand goes by whateverforever – creates work that spans art, clothing, bags, hats, vinyl figures, glass, and even doormats, tap lights and clocks. Inspired by Cannabis comedians who pushed the envelope in their genre, this Pennsylvania artist believes weed culture will continue to expand. “It’s going global, and there’s going to be a need for more people to represent – just like skating, or graff, or any artform that grew from nothing,” says GZ1. Last year, he held a fashion show on the East Coast just to give away pairs of his new footwear featuring his iconic Barfield character. WHATEVERFOREVER.COM | @GZ1WHATEVERFOREVER

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gz1
STICKY GLASS COLLABS PAUL ARNHOLD BONGS
COLLAB WITH ON THE LEANS
THE GRASS BAGS MOTHERSHIP GLASS COLLAB

talking terps

Talking Terps is a torch connecting the lifestyle of smokers worldwide. Since hitting the market with vinyl figures and apparel in 2015, they’ve brought Cannabis representation to major events like Complexcon and Designercon, going beyond the norm by creating a whole world of toys, dolls, puzzles, rugs, and porcelain statues of their signature character Terp Crawford. The brand’s incredible eye for talent is easily seen in its use of artists like Daniel Herwitt, Brian Blomerth, YEENJOY STUDIO, and Dwindlebag. Part of the Tri-Force behind Talking Terps, Hopelord described part of their method for success: “Others force the effort and lose the fun in the process. We try to keep everything natural, organic, and full of fun.”

TALKINGTERPS.COM | @TALKINGTERPS

wookerson

You can’t smoke hash all day unless you start in the morning, and you can’t get online without seeing someone referencing Wookerson’s famous phrase. This SF-based creator who helped curate the lot scene for Puffcon’s first year has been busy defining his visual style and amassing a ton of appreciators along the way. His art, clothing, and sculptures echo the spirit of skateboarding in the early ‘90s. A big part of that scene was “finding cool shit to do with your friends; if there wasn’t what you wanted to see, you made it. Instead of half pipes in the backyard, these days, it’s giant statues for hash competitions – but it’s still about having fun, being a part of something, and not stopping, even when the crowd catches up.”

WOOKERSONSTUDIOS.COM | @LOTCOMEDY

fidels

Shant Damirdjian, better known by his nickname Fidel, has been on the grind non-stop. After launching his brand and putting the term “hash hole” into the modern lexicon, winning Transbay Challenge IV, premiering a docu-series, and dropping a merch capsule with artist Aaron Kai, he kicked off 2023 with an exclusive box set of apparel with streetwear giants Carrots. When asked why the clothing is just as important as the Cannabis, he said projects like these “advance the movement in ways a brand couldn’t do by itself. You have so much more reach as a cohesive effort, and if you do it right, you get to wow the world.”

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STORY by MATT JACKSON @ACTIONMATTJACKSON for LEAF NATION | PHOTOS courtesy the artists

W H E R E Y O U R B U D T E N D E R S H O P S .

• B E S T M E N U I N S O N O M A C O U N T Y

• E D U C A T E D B U D T E N D E R S

• F I R S T T I M E S H O P P E R A N D

V E T E R A N D I S C O U N T S

• D A I L Y S P E C I A L S

w w w f o r m c o

• E X C L U S I V E D R O P S

• L O Y A L T Y P O I N T S

3 3 5 O ' H a i r C t , S a n t a R o s a , C A , 9 5 4 0 7 L i c e n s e : C 1 0 - 0 0 0 0 7 9 9 - L I C • I G : @ o u t p o s t s a n t a r o s a • M u s t b e 2 1 + t o p u r c h a s e

With a Little Help From My Friends

THE SETUP

On August 28, 1964, The Beatles played the first of two sold-out shows at the Forest Hills Music Festival in Queens, New York. After the concert, they headed back to The Delmonico Hotel on Park Avenue near Central Park. There, throngs of overzealous fans restrained by barricades awaited them out front, while inside, police patrolled the lobby and corridors to prevent any incidents.

Once in their suites on the sixth floor, the band was relaxing and enjoying some dinner with their manager Brian Epstein and personal assistant Neil Aspinall. Soon to join them was folk rock superstar Bob Dylan, who was being driven down from Woodstock by his road manager Victor Maymudes for the occasion. On the way, they’d stopped to pick up writer Al

It’s one of the most legendary seshes in history: the night that Bob Dylan got The Beatles stoned for the first time and changed the course of their career – and by extension, popular music – forever. Here’s how that historic encounter allegedly went down, as compiled from the various perspectives of those who were there.

Aronowitz – a mutual friend of Dylan and The Beatles – who had arranged the momentous meeting. Upon arriving at the hotel, Dylan’s posse was stopped by police, who – having no idea who they were – wouldn’t allow them into the elevator until Beatles’ road manager Mal Evans came down to escort them up.

McCARTNEY’S MEMORY

According to quotes compiled from his memoir “The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present” and different interviews he’s done over the years, here’s how McCartney remembers the meeting:

“We were in a hotel suite … and Bob Dylan turned up with his roadie. …We’d ordered drinks from room service – scotch and Coke and French wine were our thing back then – and Bob had disappeared into a back room… we thought maybe he’d gone to the toilet. But then Ringo

[Starr] came out of that back room looking a bit strange. He said, ‘I’ve just been with Bob, and he’s got some pot!’ And we said, ‘Oh, what is it like?’ And he said, ‘Well, the ceiling is sort of moving, coming down.’ And that was enough. We all ran into the back room, going, ‘Give us a bit, give us a bit!’ … And he gave us a puff on the joint.”

ALTERNATE ACCOUNTS

According to others in attendance, however, events unfolded a bit differently. In his Beatles biography titled “The Love You Make: An Insider’s Story Of The Beatles,” Epstein’s assistant Peter Brown gives a more detailed account. According to Brown, after their introduction, Dylan was offered the drinks they had on hand, but only wanted cheap wine – which Evans was then asked to procure. They also offered Dylan and Aronowitz

account. According to Brown,

leafmagazines.com FEB. 2023 cannthropology
Poster and ticket for the 1964 Forest Hills Music Festival.
PRESENTS 36

some “purple hearts” [a type of upper], which they politely declined – instead, suggesting they all smoke some weed. Upon hearing Dylan’s offer, The Beatles all looked at each other, then at Epstein, who timidly admitted, “We’ve never smoked marijuana before.”

In reality, that wasn’t entirely true: The boys had actually tried smoking pot a few years earlier in 1960 but apparently didn’t get high from it, as George Harrison would later recount in “The Beatles Anthology”: “We first got marijuana from an older drummer with another group in Liverpool. We didn’t actually try it until after we’d been to Hamburg. I remember we smoked it in the band room in a gig in Southport. … Everybody was saying, ‘This stuff isn’t doing anything.’ It was like that old joke where a party is going on, and two hippies are up floating on the ceiling, and one is saying to the other, ‘This stuff doesn’t work, man.’”

In any case, Brown makes it clear that The Beatles’ lack of herbal experience took Dylan by surprise:

Dylan looked disbelievingly from face to face. “But what about your song?” he asked. “The one about getting high?”

The Beatles were stupefied. “Which song?” John managed to ask.

Dylan said, “You know …” and then he sang, “And when I touch you, I get high, I get high …”

John flushed with embarrassment. “Those aren’t the words,” he admitted. “The words are, ‘I can’t hide, I can’t hide, I can’t hide …’”

At that moment, Dylan no doubt realized it would now be his historic duty to get The Beatles high for the first time. Luckily, Maymudes had brought along a “sizable bag” of weed for just such a situation. Wary of the substantial police presence in the halls, though, Dylan suggested the group adjourn into one of the adjoining bedrooms.

THE SESH

When it comes to who rolled the joints, once again, accounts vary. According to some, it was Maymudes who did the rolling. According to beatlesbible.com, however, it was Dylan: “Aronowitz was unskilled in rolling joints, so asked Dylan to do the honours; Dylan wasn’t much better, and much of the grass ended up in a fruit bowl on the room service table.”

“Bob hovered unsteadily over the bowl as he stood at the table while he tried to lift the grass from the baggie with the fingertips of one hand so he could crush it into the leaf of rolling paper which he held in his other hand,” Aronowitz wrote in his book “Bob

Dylan and The Beatles.” “In addition to the fact that Bob was a sloppy roller to begin with, what Bob had started drinking had already gotten to him.” Regardless, most seem to agree it was Dylan who lit the first joint, then handed it to Lennon, who declined – instead passing it on to his ‘royal taster’ Ringo. Unaware of stoner etiquette, Starr allegedly smoked the entire thing himself rather than passing it around the circle, prompting Maymudes to then roll everyone their own joints. They all began smoking, and before long, as Starr told Conan O’Brien in 2012, “We got high and laughed our asses off.”

“We expected something instantaneous, so we kept puffing away and saying, ‘It’s not working, is it?’” McCartney wrote in his memoir. “And suddenly, it was working. And we were giggling, laughing at each other.”

“I don’t remember much what we talked about,” Lennon later said in “The Beatles Anthology.” “We were smoking dope, drinking wine, and generally being rock ‘n’ rollers and having a laugh, you know, and surrealism. It was party time.”

Here’s how The Guardian’s Andrew Harrison set the scene: “Ringo Starr … collapsed in a giggling mess. Brian Epstein became so stoned he could only squeak, ‘I’m so high, I’m up on the ceiling.’ Paul McCartney believed he’d attained true mental clarity for the first time in his life and instructed Beatles’ roadie and major-domo Mal Evans to write down everything he said henceforth. Dylan, meanwhile, lost his cool and began answering the hotel phone by shouting, ‘This is Beatlemania here!’”

In the 1997 biography “Many Years From Now,” McCartney elaborates on his perceived pot-induced profundity, during which he repeatedly declared that he was “thinking for the first time, really thinking.”

“I’d been going through this thing of levels during the evening,” McCartney writes. “Mal gave me this little slip of paper in the morning, and written on it was, ‘There are seven levels!’ […] And we pissed ourselves laughing. I mean, ‘What the fuck’s that? What the fuck are the seven levels?’”

In his book “Another Side of Bob Dylan: A Personal History on the Road and Off the Tracks,” Maymudes reported that McCartney enjoyed the experience so much that “The following morning, Paul came up to me and hugged me for 10 minutes and said, ‘It was so great … it’s all your fault because I love this pot!’ He went into his thoughts on music while on it and how it made him feel. ‘It was just magical,’ he said.”

“We thought, ‘Wow, this is pretty amazing, this stuff,’’’ McCartney’s memoir reads. “So it became part of our repertoire from then on.”

UNDER THE INFLUENCE

From that day forward, The Beatles began consuming Cannabis on an almost daily basis – using the expression “let’s have a larf” as a 420-like code for “let’s get high.”

“The Beatles had gone beyond comprehension,” Lennon once confessed. “We were smoking marijuana for breakfast. We were well into marijuana, and nobody could communicate with us; we were just glazed eyes, giggling all the time.”

The band’s newfound love for the herb quickly manifested in their music – crediting both Dylan and marijuana as influences on their next record, “Rubber Soul,” with Lennon going as far as referring to it as their “pot album.” Their follow-up, 1966’s “Revolver,” included the song “Got to Get You Into My Life” – which McCartney eventually admitted was “entirely about pot.”

“This song is my ode to pot,” Paul said on BBC Radio in 2021. “What we had to get into our lives, it seems, was marijuana … it was something that entered our lives, and I thought it was a good idea to write a song. Only I’d know that I was talking about pot.”

Marijuana’s influence was even more blatant in their 1967 masterpiece “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” – with Ringo signing about “getting high with a little help” from his friends, and McCartney singing about how he “had a smoke” and “went into a dream” in “A Day in the Life.”

“Do you know what caused ‘Pepper?’” McCartney once told a reporter. “In one word: drugs. Pot. ‘Sgt. Pepper’ was a drug album.”

with a little help” from his friends, and McCartney singing about how he “had a smoke” and “went into remain a bit foggy, one thing appears crystal clear:

Though the exact details of their first sesh may remain a bit foggy, one thing appears crystal clear: Cannabis affected The Beatles in a profound way – infusing their music with introspective complexity and transforming the lads from Liverpool from mere pop performers into the revolutionary artists they were destined to become.

For our podcast & more Cannabis history content visit worldofcannabis.museum/cannthropology.

STORY & PHOTO COMPOSITE by BOBBY BLACK @CANNTHROPOLOGY for LEAF NATION | ORIGINAL BEATLES PHOTO by JEAN-MARIE PÉRIER
“We were smoking marijuana for breakfast,” Lennon once confessed. “Nobody could communicate with us; we were just glazed eyes, giggling all the time.”

I KNOW, HARSH TITLE – BUT SOMEONE HAD TO SAY IT. Because we’ve all found ourselves subjected to that annoying jackal of a song. And the melody is so phenomenally irritating, that it has now become a guaranteed way to jack someone with an unsuspecting prank. Just play Baby Shark when their attention is completely preoccupied with something of actual significance in their life … and watch their temperature rise.

What once was cute is now diabolical and far from funny. Because the moment it embeds into your mind, you’ll swear it’s a glitching computer chip that you can’t locate to destroy. Kinda like getting chased by a swarm of singing bees.

Baby Shark makes nails on a chalkboard sound like a guided meditation.

Now, for me this is personal because I suffer from an affliction called repetitive thought loops. This is where an idea, or a sound, will uncontrollably replay in your head. And with Baby Shark, I become incapable of prying myself from this playschool of plinking keyboards and perpetual repetition where the “doo doo doo doo doo doo doos” ricochet off my brain borders. I go to sleep with it.

I wake up with it. It affects my conversations. It creates insomnia sadness.

And there are no baby steps with Baby Shark. Sure, there’s the Jaws soundtrack lead in, but once the first note hits, it becomes heavy metal for kids. It’s like the audio version of one of those infinity mirrors you see in a fun house. But with a fun house, you can leave it where you found it. Not Baby Shark. It preys on you like an unapologetic spam call.

I’ll bet even sharks hate Baby Shark. In fact, I’d like to cover the creators of Baby Shark with chum and throw them into a Baby Shark tank. And by the way: Everything is NOT awesome! Unless we’re singing about weed.

38 LEAFMAGAZINES.COM feb. 2023 stoney baloney FOLLOW @RICKERDJ // GET THE AUDIO VERSION & EVERY EPISODE AT LEAFMAGAZINES.COM

RAPPERS, RIDES AND RAPPERS, RIDES AND REDNECK VIBES. REDNECK VIBES.

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All People beardedlorax stashleylynn maaryjwhite rickerdj leaflifepodcast PODCAST THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS #205 MONEY & CANNABIS #206 BURNING MAN #207 WHEN WEED WAS ILLEGAL WATCH ON LEAF LIFE PODCAST V2 LISTEN EVERYWHERE THIS MONTH: Marijuana products may be purchased or possessed only by persons 21 or older. This product has intoxicating effects and may be habit-forming. Marijuana can impair concentration, coordination and judgment. Do not operate a vehicle or machinery under the influence of this drug. There may be health risks associated with consumption of this product. For use only by adults 21 and older. Keep out of reach of children.
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