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Delaware Bill Would Limit THC Beverage Sales To Liquor Stores, Closing Out Existing Hemp Retailers

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“This bill effectively shuts small [hemp] retailers out of a market they helped create.”

By Briana Hill, Spotlight Delaware

A rift has emerged between the alcohol industry and hemp store operators as each lobbies lawmakers over a pair of state bills that they say could make or break their businesses.

The proposed legislation, sponsored by Rep. Debra Heffernan (D-Bellefonte), aims to bring order to Delaware’s current unregulated market of drinks and edibles infused with tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the compound that’s responsible for the “high” in marijuana.

Originally introduced as one sweeping measure, the bill has now been split into two: one regulating THC-infused beverages and a second that would govern edibles such as gummies, smokable flower, tinctures and oils.

What was once only available on the illicit market two decades ago is now increasingly a part of our daily lives—available in corner stores, liquor stores and even on bar menus.

THC-infused products have become increasingly popular since the passage of the 2018 U.S. Farm Bill, which created a loophole allowing for the legal commercial and retail sale of hemp-derived substances.

Hemp is a non-intoxicating cannabis plant that contains 0.3 percent or less THC by dry weight. But entrepreneurial hemp farmers have figured out a way to chemically convert the non-intoxicating compound cannabidiol (CBD) from hemp into intoxicating substances like delta-9 and delta-8 THC. It’s technically legal as long as the hemp at time of harvest stays below legal thresholds.

Aside from regulations around harvests and the complicated conversion process, however, the end product is arguably indistinguishable from marijuana-based THC.

Today, drinks and gummies with 5, 10 or 20 milligrams of hemp-derived THC are commonly found in Delaware and across the country.

Bill proposes new limits

Heffernan’s beverage-focused bill would require all THC-infused drinks to move through Delaware’s three-tier alcohol system. This means drinks must be funneled through one of the state’s 22 licensed liquor distributors, tested by either the state’s Public Health Lab or an authorized cannabis testing facility and sold exclusively in liquor stores. It would also prohibit bars, restaurants and microbreweries from serving infused drinks for consumption on their premises.

The second half of the proposal, which would limit the sale of THC edibles to licensed marijuana retailers, won’t be filed until next year.

Liquor store owners, for their part, have welcomed the bill, saying THC drinks could help offset declining alcohol sales that have occurred in recent years, with some estimating that the beverages could account for 20 percent of their revenue.

But many hemp and CBD store operators say that both the current and the future bill would take all THC products off their shelves and force over a dozen small businesses to close down.

“This bill effectively shuts small [hemp] retailers out of a market they helped create,” said Amit Vyas, a local consultant for small hemp businesses, during a May 13 House Economic Development/Banking/Insurance & Commerce Committee hearing.

Heffernan’s beverage bill would also limit the amount of THC in drinks to 10 milligrams per container and would also force importers and manufacturers to pay a 50-cent tax on each 12-ounce container that they sell.

Despite the ongoing feud, Heffernan said the regulation is about consumer safety, particularly concerns around underage sales and questionable ingredients in untested products.

State officials began investigating Delaware’s unregulated hemp market last year, as these types of products have been found in different convenience stores, smoke shops, and gas stations throughout the state.

Last year, there were over 300 cannabis-related emergency room visits, while this year there have been a total of 64, according to the Delaware Division of Public Health.

The problem has also interfered with Delaware’s emerging adult recreational marijuana industry, which has yet to launch. Many opponents of the industry previously pointed to issues like odor and public smoking. However, former Marijuana Commissioner Rob Coupe repeatedly noted that those concerns stem from the currently illegal or unregulated market.

Delaware’s THC bills also come amid recent developments in hemp regulation at the federal level. A provision in the recently proposed U.S. Agriculture Appropriations bill would redefine hemp to ban products containing any “quantifiable” amount of THC. If passed, the change could outlaw most hemp-derived products, including non-intoxicating CBD, nationwide.

Heffernan’s THC beverage bill ultimately passed through the committee last month, and she hopes to see the legislation on the House agenda this week.

She said that the first bill had more agreement on the path forward, so she plans to continue discussions around other regulating consumable THC products over the summer with the state’s new marijuana commissioner and other stakeholders before introducing the next measure, which most likely won’t hit Dover until next year, she said.

Liquors seek to follow trend

During the House Economic Development/Banking/Insurance & Commerce committee last month, various liquor retailers, attorneys, hemp shop owners and advocates expressed praise and concerns with the initial joint legislation.

Co-founder of Universal Beverage Importers, Jason Giuliano, noted that consumer behaviors are shifting away from alcohol and that THC-infused beverages could make up a fifth of liquor store sales.

Another commenter, Bill Galbraith, owner of Wine and Spirits Co. of Greenville and Tims Liquors in Hockessin, noted that he has seen a decline in alcohol sales over the past two years and that he is currently seeking ways to appeal more to his customers.

“THC-infused beverages offer a path to stabilize revenue and meet customers where they are,” Galbraith said.

Various other representatives of the alcohol industry attended to voice their support, including Paul Ruggiero, president of N.K.S. Distributors, Delaware’s largest alcohol distributor.

But small business owners who sell CBD and hemp-derived products say the bill unfairly pushes them out of a market that they helped to establish.

Hemp stores could be killed

One resident, Jesse Ginefra, owner of Botana Organics, has run his hemp store in Wilmington since 2019.

Before that, he worked on a hemp farm in Colorado, but said he was inspired to open his store to sell safe and clean products after coming to Delaware and seeing that different gas stations and convenience stores were marketing THC and CBD products.

His shelves are filled with different hemp-derived and CBD products that tailor to the different needs of his clients, some of whom suffer from PTSD, brain disorders, arthritis, anxiety and depression. More than half of Ginefra’s customers are elders, many of whom visit his store regularly.

“I could always move to Pennsylvania for now, that’s right up the road. But I’m honestly a little bit worried about some of our clients who are elderly people, and they rely on taking hundreds of milligrams of CBD per day,” he said.

Ginefra expressed frustration over the bill’s implications for hemp stores that follow the rules, as he noted that his payment processor already requires lab testing for all products and that he checks customers’ IDs as part of standard practice.

Ginefra and other advocates in the hemp and cannabis industry, including Zoë Patchell, president of the Delaware Cannabis Advocacy Network, say that they’ve been in communication with lawmakers in hopes of finding common ground on the upcoming legislation to regulate THC edibles and to ensure hemp stores can remain open by being regulated under the state’s framework.

This story was first published by Spotlight Delaware.

FBI Grants Delaware Marijuana Officials A Fingerprint Service Code, Allowing Launch Of Legal Market To Proceed

Photo courtesy of Kimzy Nanney.

Marijuana Moment is made possible with support from readers. If you rely on our cannabis advocacy journalism to stay informed, please consider a monthly Patreon pledge.

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High Times Was The Most Influential Publication Of My Life

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What does it mean to you? So often, we forget that each of us sees the world through a unique lens. While we may share an experience, our exact perspective is ours alone.

Many of us discovered High Times during different chapters of our lives. For me, it started in childhood. I grew up reading the magazine, drawn to its bold voice and rebellious energy. It inspired me. It offered a sense of freedom—and more than anything, it reassured me that I wasn’t alone in believing this plant made life better. Whether cannabis helped us feel balanced, feel whole, or simply feel good, High Times was a beacon for those of us who saw it as more than just a vice.

Today, cannabis is often framed as a safer alternative to alcohol or tobacco. While that may be true, that narrative feels incomplete. For those of us who came up in the culture, the plant was never just about harm reduction. Our early experiences weren’t driven by taste, branding, or appearance. They were about how it made us feel.

We smoked what we could get our hands on. Brown buds with stems and seeds—sometimes green, sometimes dry and dusty, sometimes damp and moldy. The names were basic or nonexistent. We called it green, brown, dirt, chronic, bammer. No one was posting nug photos or comparing flavor profiles to candy. We were in it for the high, for the relief, and for the connection.

For me, cannabis was a constant. Before school, at lunch, after school. We masked the smell with gum, sprays, and excuses. Everyone around me smoked. My friends, the dealers, the heads at shows, the random adults who still had a foot in the underground. Often, people sold just to afford their own habit. The culture grew organically from the lifestyle. And while we were getting high, we were also medicating—whether we called it that or not.

Cannabis is the most diverse cultivated plant on the planet. No other species has been shaped and selected into as many distinct types. It’s an adaptogen, and our bodies are equipped with cannabinoid receptors that allow the plant to affect us in complex and deeply personal ways. This is part of what makes it so difficult for doctors to prescribe in a conventional sense. One cultivar might energize one person and sedate another. Some feel calm, others paranoid. Its effects are influenced by body chemistry, food, mood, stress, time of day—even the weather. It is not one-size-fits-all.

High Times helped us make sense of that variability in the plant and the culture around it. It was the most influential publication of my life. I still have my collection from the early 1990s, each issue stacked with care and reverence. The article that captivated me most growing up was the “Million Dollar Grow Room.” Years later, I was honored to be featured in the second edition of that same article. That moment of reflection and recognition remains one of the defining highlights of my career.

Over the years, I’ve built lasting friendships with former High Times editors, writers, and photographers. These were true believers who helped shape the voice of the movement. Now, a new generation carries that legacy forward. And it is not a light burden.

High Times is more than a brand. It is a cultural institution. It carries the stories of survivors, visionaries, and revolutionaries. From Jack Herer to Michael Kennedy—from legalization architects to counterculture icons like Steven Hager—the magazine has always served as a platform for voices pushing against the mainstream. And we can’t forget the countless unnamed contributors, those who submitted stories and photos without credit or compensation, simply for the love of the plant and the mission.

The groundwork has been laid. But the story is still being written. The cannabis industry continues to evolve, and with it, our responsibilities. We owe everything to those who came before us. This plant has traveled across continents, passed from hand to hand, seed to seed. In the past seventy years alone, we’ve witnessed an explosion of cross selection and hybridization unlike anything else in agriculture.

High Times was a catalyst throughout that process. From the 1970s through the later part of the 2010s, it helped shape what the cannabis community would become. Much of what we see now in newer publications and across social media can be traced back to the culture that High Times helped nurture and protect.

I’m an optimist. I believe the best chapters are still ahead. The High Times name still matters. It still carries weight. It still represents something sacred. And if stewarded with care, it can continue to be a voice for the culture and a champion of the plant. The impact the brand has already made is immeasurable—but its potential is even greater. Our passion is real. Our connection is deep. And we are fortunate to be part of something larger than ourselves—part of a movement, part of a legacy, part of a plant that makes the world better, one person at a time.

This article is from an external, unpaid contributor. It does not represent High Times’ reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy. 



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Revelry NYC 2025: Inside New York’s Cannabis Culture & Industry Festival

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In just a few short years, Revelry NYC has become the cannabis event where New York’s culture, commerce, and community converge. This year, it’s taking over Pier 36 in Manhattan on September 12–13, 2025, and according to co-founder Lulu Tsui, it’s bigger, more inclusive, and more dialed-in than ever.

As the Chief Experience Officer for On The Revel, Tsui has spent years designing events that bridge the gap between New York’s rapidly evolving cannabis industry and the community that sustains it.

“We create spaces, trade shows, events, and industry nights specifically for the cannabis industry,” Tsui told me. “To gather good people who are working in the industry, interested in the industry, and who want to support the community.”

Lulu’s story starts far from the Manhattan waterfront. Her family immigrated from northern China to Eugene, Oregon, in the late 1970s, a place she describes as “a little hippie college town that hasn’t changed since the ’60s.”

The people who helped her family adjust to life in America were cannabis growers and distributors. “I was just raised by aunties and uncles that had a very different viewpoint towards cannabis and psychedelics,” she said. This was in stark contrast to her “super hardcore communist dragon” parents, who, like many Chinese immigrants, were hesitant and still saw cannabis simply as “drugs.”

That early exposure shaped her belief that “community and how you talk about it, how you work with it, can change hearts and minds in such a huge way.”

Her first cannabis experience came at 13, facilitated by her aunt, followed by an equally intentional introduction to psychedelics from her uncle. “It’s not a taboo thing. It’s not a scary thing. It’s a healing thing.”

Photo: Angie Vasquez

Designing Experiences Like No One Else

Tsui and her co-founder, Jacobi Holland, approach event production like UX designers. “We’re the most annoying group to work with because we talk through the flow for every interaction,” she laughed. “From sponsors and exhibitors to attendees and speakers, we design based on what people need.”

They also have the rare advantage of having worked as operators themselves, Tsui in the Washington State market, Holland in Colorado, bringing firsthand understanding to every decision. “Would you have a shoe designer design a shoe if they’ve never worn shoes before?” she asked. “We know the challenges operators face.”

The team behind Revelry reads like a cross-disciplinary dream roster:

  • Jason Starr, a human rights lawyer and co-author of New York’s MRTA legalization bill.
  • Peter Marcato, neuroscientist and head of community and content.
  • Gerald Dean, a veteran of sales and trade show production.
  • Saki Fenderson, producer, activist, and longtime community organizer.
  • Delilah Ware is, fresh graduate of LIM College’s Cannabis Program.

Photo: Erica Harris

For Tsui, diversity goes beyond surface appearances. “Diversity is your personal background, education, life story, religion, all of those things. We have multi-dimensional humans who all believe in being of service.”

From a Gym Basement to Pier 36

Revelry’s first trade show took place in early 2023 in the basement of a gym. Even then, the formula clicked: 60 exhibitors, 44 of the state’s 60 licensed dispensaries, and a lot of handshakes.

Now, with their sixth trade show approaching, the scale has exploded. This year’s Buyers’ Club will feature 200+ legal New York cannabis brands and over 400 retailers.

“We’re calling it the New York Hunger Games,” Tsui joked. “There’s always chaos in the headlines, but what we’re trying to do is highlight the people who are still pushing forward as best as they can.”

A Lineup as Bold as the City Itself

This year’s Revelry Festival stage is stacked with talent that embodies New York’s unmatched cultural energy. Black Thought brings lyrical mastery, while Angel & Dren infuse the waterfront with their genre-bending DJ sets. Phony Ppl will deliver their signature blend of soul, R&B, and hip-hop, joined by the culinary creativity of Chef Nikki and the Latin-inspired sounds of Dos Flakos. Scottie Beam takes the mic for a keynote conversation, and Eagle Witt brings the laughs with his sharp comedic edge.

It’s a lineup that reflects exactly what Revelry stands for: the seamless blend of serious industry connections with the art, music, and flavor that make New York a global icon.

Building on the success of May 2025’s Buyers’ Club, which drew 1,800+ attendees and connected 300+ buyers with 160+ brands, this September’s festival is set to further cement New York’s role as a cannabis powerhouse.

Two Days, Two Experiences

Day 1 – Friday, Sept. 12: Industry-Only Buyers’ Club

This is all about business. “Ninety percent of our attendees are buyers,” Tsui explained. “You’re talking to the decision makers who can give you a purchase order or become a hot lead.”

Day 2 – Saturday, Sept. 13: Revelry Festival

When the doors open to the public, the vibe shifts from trade show floor to full-blown cultural celebration. Music, food, live art, and consumer education panels set the tone for a uniquely New York experience.

This year’s programming includes:

  • Consumer Education & “Keeping It Real” Brand-Building panels
  • OG New York Legacy Strain Stories
  • A Psychedelics Panel previewing On The Revel’s January psychedelic conference
  • Keynote interviews with Scotty Beam and Black Thought
  • Live performances from Phony Ppl, Angel + Dren, Dos Blacos, and more surprise guests

And yes, Tsui is trying to bring in roller disco.

Landing a venue like Pier 36 is not as simple as signing a contract and mailing in a deposit. For Tsui and her team, it can be a year-long process of building trust, answering concerns, and proving that a large-scale cannabis event can run as smoothly and as safely as any other major cultural gathering in New York City.

“It usually takes me and the team a year to get sign-off for a festival this large,” Tsui said. While sales managers at potential venues are often excited about the idea, the final decision-makers can be more cautious. “We’re still dealing with that stigma, what about the children, there’s going to be crime, all of those misconceptions,” she explained.

Overcoming that hesitation requires more than just promises. Revelry leans on a proven track record: years of hosting high-profile, incident-free events, maintaining clear communication with venue partners, and leaving every location in better condition than they found. This level of professionalism has not only earned them repeat invitations but also allowed them to secure spaces that are rarely, if ever, used for cannabis-related gatherings.

By combining transparency, meticulous planning, and genuine respect for their hosts, Tsui and her team are showing New York and the rest of the country that cannabis culture can be celebrated openly, responsibly, and with the same level of polish as any top-tier music festival or industry convention.

New York Cannabis Culture: Quiet but Powerful

Unlike California, where cannabis can be a loud part of personal identity, Tsui says most New Yorkers consume quietly. “Everybody I know consumes weed, they’re just not loud about it. It’s part of their creative process, their hiking trip, their meditation, their breathwork.”

Part of Revelry Festival’s mission is to grow the “addressable consumer market” by making cannabis as integrated into lifestyle culture as food, music, and art.

Not Just Another Trade Show

Trade show fatigue is real, but Tsui believes Revelry thrives because it’s more than a convention center with booths. “We don’t see things as transactions. We’re very rich in culture, community, and industry currency.”

Her team listens closely to feedback after every event and experiments with new ideas, even if they might fail. “Most of the time it hits. Sometimes it doesn’t. But no one’s pointing fingers.”

This openness to iteration keeps the event fresh, and the mix of business-first focus on Day 1 and community celebration on Day 2 ensures that both sides of the industry get value.

The Bigger Picture

Tsui envisions a future where cannabis events in New York are as culturally embedded as art fairs and music festivals. “Let’s do what New York does best with culture. Let’s bring the food. Let’s bring music. Let’s bring good vibes. Let’s bring cannabis.”

By carefully curating both the brands that exhibit and the audience that attends, Revelry NYC has become a trusted platform for genuine connection between legacy and legal operators, between industry insiders and consumers, and between cannabis and the broader cultural fabric of the city.

Revelry NYC 2025 At a Glance

Location: Pier 36, Manhattan

Dates:

  • Friday, Sept. 12 – Industry-only Buyers’ Club (Brands, Cultivators, Processors, Retailers, Microbusinesses, Licensed Operators)
  • Saturday, Sept. 13 – 21+ Public Revelry Festival

Highlights:

  • 200+ Legal NY Cannabis Brands
  • 400+ Retailers & Buyers
  • Consumer Education & Brand Panels
  • OG Legacy Strain Stories & Psychedelics Discussions
  • Live Performances & Surprise Guests

As I wrapped up our conversation, Tsui reminded me:

“We’re just trying to create spaces for people to gather, and I think we’re pretty good at it.”

For anyone invested in the future of New York cannabis, whether you’re a brand, buyer, advocate, or consumer, Revelry NYC isn’t just another date on the calendar. It’s where the state’s cannabis culture comes to life.





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Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

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featured

Revelry NYC 2025: Inside New York’s Cannabis Culture & Industry Festival

Published

on


In just a few short years, Revelry NYC has become the cannabis event where New York’s culture, commerce, and community converge. This year, it’s taking over Pier 36 in Manhattan on September 12–13, 2025, and according to co-founder Lulu Tsui, it’s bigger, more inclusive, and more dialed-in than ever.

As the Chief Experience Officer for On The Revel, Tsui has spent years designing events that bridge the gap between New York’s rapidly evolving cannabis industry and the community that sustains it.

“We create spaces, trade shows, events, and industry nights specifically for the cannabis industry,” Tsui told me. “To gather good people who are working in the industry, interested in the industry, and who want to support the community.”

Lulu’s story starts far from the Manhattan waterfront. Her family immigrated from northern China to Eugene, Oregon, in the late 1970s, a place she describes as “a little hippie college town that hasn’t changed since the ’60s.”

The people who helped her family adjust to life in America were cannabis growers and distributors. “I was just raised by aunties and uncles that had a very different viewpoint towards cannabis and psychedelics,” she said. This was in stark contrast to her “super hardcore communist dragon” parents, who, like many Chinese immigrants, were hesitant and still saw cannabis simply as “drugs.”

That early exposure shaped her belief that “community and how you talk about it, how you work with it, can change hearts and minds in such a huge way.”

Her first cannabis experience came at 13, facilitated by her aunt, followed by an equally intentional introduction to psychedelics from her uncle. “It’s not a taboo thing. It’s not a scary thing. It’s a healing thing.”

Photo: Angie Vasquez

Designing Experiences Like No One Else

Tsui and her co-founder, Jacobi Holland, approach event production like UX designers. “We’re the most annoying group to work with because we talk through the flow for every interaction,” she laughed. “From sponsors and exhibitors to attendees and speakers, we design based on what people need.”

They also have the rare advantage of having worked as operators themselves, Tsui in the Washington State market, Holland in Colorado, bringing firsthand understanding to every decision. “Would you have a shoe designer design a shoe if they’ve never worn shoes before?” she asked. “We know the challenges operators face.”

The team behind Revelry reads like a cross-disciplinary dream roster:

  • Jason Starr, a human rights lawyer and co-author of New York’s MRTA legalization bill.
  • Peter Marcato, neuroscientist and head of community and content.
  • Gerald Dean, a veteran of sales and trade show production.
  • Saki Fenderson, producer, activist, and longtime community organizer.
  • Delilah Ware is, fresh graduate of LIM College’s Cannabis Program.

Photo: Erica Harris

For Tsui, diversity goes beyond surface appearances. “Diversity is your personal background, education, life story, religion, all of those things. We have multi-dimensional humans who all believe in being of service.”

From a Gym Basement to Pier 36

Revelry’s first trade show took place in early 2023 in the basement of a gym. Even then, the formula clicked: 60 exhibitors, 44 of the state’s 60 licensed dispensaries, and a lot of handshakes.

Now, with their sixth trade show approaching, the scale has exploded. This year’s Buyers’ Club will feature 200+ legal New York cannabis brands and over 400 retailers.

“We’re calling it the New York Hunger Games,” Tsui joked. “There’s always chaos in the headlines, but what we’re trying to do is highlight the people who are still pushing forward as best as they can.”

A Lineup as Bold as the City Itself

This year’s Revelry Festival stage is stacked with talent that embodies New York’s unmatched cultural energy. Black Thought brings lyrical mastery, while Angel & Dren infuse the waterfront with their genre-bending DJ sets. Phony Ppl will deliver their signature blend of soul, R&B, and hip-hop, joined by the culinary creativity of Chef Nikki and the Latin-inspired sounds of Dos Flakos. Scottie Beam takes the mic for a keynote conversation, and Eagle Witt brings the laughs with his sharp comedic edge.

It’s a lineup that reflects exactly what Revelry stands for: the seamless blend of serious industry connections with the art, music, and flavor that make New York a global icon.

Building on the success of May 2025’s Buyers’ Club, which drew 1,800+ attendees and connected 300+ buyers with 160+ brands, this September’s festival is set to further cement New York’s role as a cannabis powerhouse.

Two Days, Two Experiences

Day 1 – Friday, Sept. 12: Industry-Only Buyers’ Club

This is all about business. “Ninety percent of our attendees are buyers,” Tsui explained. “You’re talking to the decision makers who can give you a purchase order or become a hot lead.”

Day 2 – Saturday, Sept. 13: Revelry Festival

When the doors open to the public, the vibe shifts from trade show floor to full-blown cultural celebration. Music, food, live art, and consumer education panels set the tone for a uniquely New York experience.

This year’s programming includes:

  • Consumer Education & “Keeping It Real” Brand-Building panels
  • OG New York Legacy Strain Stories
  • A Psychedelics Panel previewing On The Revel’s January psychedelic conference
  • Keynote interviews with Scotty Beam and Black Thought
  • Live performances from Phony Ppl, Angel + Dren, Dos Blacos, and more surprise guests

And yes, Tsui is trying to bring in roller disco.

Landing a venue like Pier 36 is not as simple as signing a contract and mailing in a deposit. For Tsui and her team, it can be a year-long process of building trust, answering concerns, and proving that a large-scale cannabis event can run as smoothly and as safely as any other major cultural gathering in New York City.

“It usually takes me and the team a year to get sign-off for a festival this large,” Tsui said. While sales managers at potential venues are often excited about the idea, the final decision-makers can be more cautious. “We’re still dealing with that stigma, what about the children, there’s going to be crime, all of those misconceptions,” she explained.

Overcoming that hesitation requires more than just promises. Revelry leans on a proven track record: years of hosting high-profile, incident-free events, maintaining clear communication with venue partners, and leaving every location in better condition than they found. This level of professionalism has not only earned them repeat invitations but also allowed them to secure spaces that are rarely, if ever, used for cannabis-related gatherings.

By combining transparency, meticulous planning, and genuine respect for their hosts, Tsui and her team are showing New York and the rest of the country that cannabis culture can be celebrated openly, responsibly, and with the same level of polish as any top-tier music festival or industry convention.

New York Cannabis Culture: Quiet but Powerful

Unlike California, where cannabis can be a loud part of personal identity, Tsui says most New Yorkers consume quietly. “Everybody I know consumes weed, they’re just not loud about it. It’s part of their creative process, their hiking trip, their meditation, their breathwork.”

Part of Revelry Festival’s mission is to grow the “addressable consumer market” by making cannabis as integrated into lifestyle culture as food, music, and art.

Not Just Another Trade Show

Trade show fatigue is real, but Tsui believes Revelry thrives because it’s more than a convention center with booths. “We don’t see things as transactions. We’re very rich in culture, community, and industry currency.”

Her team listens closely to feedback after every event and experiments with new ideas, even if they might fail. “Most of the time it hits. Sometimes it doesn’t. But no one’s pointing fingers.”

This openness to iteration keeps the event fresh, and the mix of business-first focus on Day 1 and community celebration on Day 2 ensures that both sides of the industry get value.

The Bigger Picture

Tsui envisions a future where cannabis events in New York are as culturally embedded as art fairs and music festivals. “Let’s do what New York does best with culture. Let’s bring the food. Let’s bring music. Let’s bring good vibes. Let’s bring cannabis.”

By carefully curating both the brands that exhibit and the audience that attends, Revelry NYC has become a trusted platform for genuine connection between legacy and legal operators, between industry insiders and consumers, and between cannabis and the broader cultural fabric of the city.

Revelry NYC 2025 At a Glance

Location: Pier 36, Manhattan

Dates:

  • Friday, Sept. 12 – Industry-only Buyers’ Club (Brands, Cultivators, Processors, Retailers, Microbusinesses, Licensed Operators)
  • Saturday, Sept. 13 – 21+ Public Revelry Festival

Highlights:

  • 200+ Legal NY Cannabis Brands
  • 400+ Retailers & Buyers
  • Consumer Education & Brand Panels
  • OG Legacy Strain Stories & Psychedelics Discussions
  • Live Performances & Surprise Guests

As I wrapped up our conversation, Tsui reminded me:

“We’re just trying to create spaces for people to gather, and I think we’re pretty good at it.”

For anyone invested in the future of New York cannabis, whether you’re a brand, buyer, advocate, or consumer, Revelry NYC isn’t just another date on the calendar. It’s where the state’s cannabis culture comes to life.





Source link

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Author: mscannabiz.com

MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Continue Reading
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