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A Brief History of High Times (2019)

Published
2 days agoon

By Mike Gianakos
Against all odds, High Times became an internationally known magazine, now celebrating 45 years of continuous publication with more than 500 issues. There is no question that the publication far exceeded the wildest, most ambitious expectations of the men and women who first introduced it to the world back in the mid-1970s.
High Times was founded in 1974 by the political activist and ace marijuana smuggler Thomas King Forcade. Forcade, it is said, was the first activist to use pieing as an act of protest, back in 1970. He was a brilliant and savvy media mind who co-founded and ran the Underground Press Syndicate, a network of counterculture publications, in the late 1960s. And he kept some of those magazines afloat, just as he later did with High Times during its lean years, with proceeds from his smuggling activities.
When Forcade conceived of High Times, it was, according to legend, intended as a one-off spoof of Playboy, with cannabis standing in for scantily clad women. However, some believe that Forcade’s mission in creating this magazine was no joke—perhaps even a protest against Richard Nixon’s war on weed. Nixon, of course, hated marijuana and, even more so, marijuana smokers (he would have absolutely despised a marijuana magazine being funded by pot-smuggling profits). His Controlled Substances Act of 1970 classified cannabis as a Schedule I drug with a high potential for abuse and no medicinal value, and it’s the reason pot is still federally illegal today.
While it’s likely that Forcade would have been excited by the opportunity to create something that would both give a platform to the much-maligned marijuana plant and agitate his foes, it’s hard to believe he could have had any inkling of the almost immediate sensation High Times was about to become. The magazine that was conceived of during a nitrous oxide session was about to rival mainstream titles like Rolling Stone and National Lampoon in sales.
The first issue of High Times debuted in the summer of 1974 and was a massive hit, quickly selling out its initial print run of 10,000 copies. The issue was reprinted twice and sold out each time. The iconic cover of High Times No. 1 had a lot to do with the accomplishment. The image of a young woman tipping her head back in preparation for ingesting a shroom (which, in reality, was a perfectly legal store-bought mushroom) was undeniably eye-catching. As the cover-shoot photographer Robyn Scott explained, it was intended to create the feeling of “Going on a safari, a trip, escape from reality. It was about a journey.” Of course, the content in High Times No. 1 also contributed to the issue’s success. Features touting the medical properties of cannabis and the benefits of hemp were well ahead of their time, and an interview with a “lady dealer” was enough to pique most Stoners’ interest. Clearly, this was content you couldn’t find anywhere else.
On the heels of the success of High Times No. 1, the second issue of HT quickly sold out its 50,000-copy print run. Forcade and his outlaw publication had found an eager audience. Soon, High Times’s circulation would balloon to over half a million.
The 1970s produced some of the most iconic High Times covers, from the bare breast smothered in chocolate (October ’75) to the close-up look at a live cannabis plant (June ’76). Yes, it wasn’t until 1976, the 10th issue of High Times, that a live pot plant appeared on the cover. Cannabis was such a taboo subject at the time that a bare, chocolate-covered breast was considered the safer cover image by staffers. In time, cannabis plants would become a cover-image mainstay for the magazine. As senior cultivation editor Danny Danko puts it, “People love to see what their pot looks like when it’s growing.”
Other notable covers from this period include Andy Warhol with a Coke bottle (August ’77), the bananas cover (September ’78), Dope & Sex (October ’78) and, of course, Bob Marley (September ’76)—you can read more about HTs classic covers on page 54.
The rapid rise of High Times was the “publishing success story of the ’70s,” says former HT contributor Albert Goldman. The magazine was able to showcase celebrities like Marley, Mick Jagger and Peter Tosh as well as important counterculture writers like Charles Bukowski, William S. Burroughs and Terry Southern. According to Goldman, “Forcade would see the circulation double with every issue for years, until at its peak, in 1978, High Times was read by four million people a month [and] grossed five million dollars a year.”
Then, at the height of his success as a publisher, Forcade tragically took his own life in 1978 at the age of 33. His lawyer, Michael Kennedy, would eventually run the company and, indeed, lead High Times during some of its most prosperous years. Kennedy was a fascinating character whose connection to the counterculture was primarily through the clients he ferociously defended, including Huey Newton, Timothy Leary and members of the Weather Underground. While Kennedy would eventually take over as chairman, High Times was put into a trust after Forcade died.
As the magazine continued on without its founder and benefactor, it took a brief detour into hard drugs. Cocaine was often found on the covers and in the centerfolds of the magazine during the early to mid ’80s. Inside, High Times’s famed Trans High Market Quotations (THMQ), which provides readers with pot prices in different locations and has run in every issue of HT, included the going rate for coke, methamphetamines, LSD and more. The king of counterculture magazines was at a crossroads. Would it continue to embrace all drugs, or would High Times kick the habit and stick with cannabis?
Luckily, the magazine’s leadership shifted in the late ’80s, and the editorial team of Steven Hager and John Howell made the wise decision to leave coke and other hard drugs behind, keeping the magazine focused on promoting pot. Around this time, Hager also made the magazine’s first foray into the Dutch cannabis scene, profiling master breeder Nevil Schoenmakers in the March 1987 issue. Hager felt he was on to something in Holland, where, thanks to that nation’s tolerance of cannabis, a robust breeding scene had developed. The following year, 1988, Hager held the first-ever Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam. This was a seminal moment for High Times, as the event would continue to be held for decades, becoming the biggest cannabis competition in the world, and eventually spreading stateside when medical and adult-use legalization laws became a reality in America.
With the magazine back on track, pot remained front and center (along with select celebrities and musicians). Throughout the ’90s and into the new millennium, cultivation articles took on a bigger role in HT along with high-quality cannabis photographs.
However, an insidious DEA investigation nearly brought the company down just as it was hitting its stride. Operation Green Merchant launched in October 1989 in response to the rise in home cultivation at the time. The DEA targeted advertisers in High Times and Sinsemilla Tips magazine, along with Seed Bank of Holland owner Nevil Schoenmakers. The feds tracked shipments of grow equipment sold by these advertisers and busted the recipients in an earnest effort to wipe out the cultivation industry. Green Merchant resulted in over 1,000 arrests and raids of nearly 1,000 indoor grow ops. In the end, Sinsemilla Tips was shuttered and Schoenmakers went on the run. High Times ultimately weathered the storm but the climate of fear and uncertainty created by the operation had a lasting impact. It would be years before the magazine fully recovered.
High Times faced its next challenge in 2004, when new leadership made the decision to remove marijuana altogether from the pages of the magazine. The idea, as best as anyone can tell, was to turn HT into a literary/counterculture/political magazine. And while it might have seemed wise on paper, it did not work in practice as readers were alienated by the new HT. Fortunately, the company realized the mistake and, in 2005, brought cannabis back to High Times with a triumphant cover announcing that “The Buds Are Back!” over a backdrop of Strawberry Cough nugs. Immediately, the magazine regained its audience, and cannabis has been the focal point of High Times ever since.
As High Times heads into a new decade, navigating a digital world, the focus remains fixed on pot. And we hope you, loyal reader, will continue to enjoy the marijuana journalism, photography and cultivation tips you find in the pages of this magazine.

Read the full issue here.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Slipknot’s Sid Wilson Proposes to Kelly Osbourne During Ozzy’s Farewell Show

Published
3 hours agoon
July 6, 2025
Yesterday in front of Ozzy Osbourne, Sharon, and their rock royalty friends Sid Wilson, Slipknot’s longtime DJ and sonic architect, got down on one knee and asked Kelly Osbourne to marry him.
She said yes.
It happened backstage during Ozzy Osbourne’s final-ever performance with Black Sabbath, as part of the historic Back to the Beginning reunion concert in Birmingham. A farewell for one era, and the start of something new.
The ring? A one-of-a-kind monster with too many diamonds to count, from world-famous celebrity jeweler Pascal Mouawad, known for making the Miss Universe and Miss USA crowns, and a close friend of Sid’s. Designed in secret and revealed during this historic event, the moment was raw, heartfelt, and unforgettable.
Why High Times?
For over a decade, Sid Wilson has been quietly working on something else behind the scenes: #ZERO, a cannabis strain born from years of selective breeding and personal investment.
Released earlier this year in collaboration with California cultivator Mickey Flowers, #ZERO blends Chem Dog 91, SFV OG, and Thai genetics, producing towering plants with massive structure and intense effects. It was crafted with care, hand-watered using mountain runoff from Mt. Baldy, stress-tested in full sun at desert-level heat.
“This strain is like Jurassic Park,” says Mickey. “Big buds, high CO₂ intake, and a knockout high if you’re not ready.”
But beyond the genetics and the buzz, there’s intention. Sid is donating 100% of his profits from #ZERO to charities supporting Parkinson’s and cancer research, a personal mission rooted in respect for Ozzy and a desire to give back.
The strain debuted at Caviland Dispensary in Los Angeles and quickly expanded to shelves in six states: Arizona, California, Nevada, Michigan, Oklahoma, and New Mexico.
It’s not the reason for the proposal, but it’s part of why High Times was trusted to tell this story.
Legacy, Love, and the Loudest Goodbye
The show marked the end of a chapter: Black Sabbath reunited. A stage packed with legends. One final bow for the band that changed everything.
And after the encore faded and the crowd dispersed, something deeply personal unfolded — not for the spotlight, but for love.
We’re grateful to share it with you.
Because sometimes, the loudest thing in the room is the quiet act of asking someone to build a life with you.
Sometimes, the most powerful story isn’t about fame or fire; it’s about heart.
Check out the pics, Ozzy and Sharon were seated nearby and as Sid was about to propose, Ozzy yelled out “Fuck off you’re not marrying my daughter!” Lol
Cover image via Instagram.

Author: mscannabiz.com
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Marijuana Users In Iowa Are Engaged And Active Citizens, Survey Shows—Smashing ‘Lazy Stoner’ Stereotypes

Published
5 hours agoon
July 6, 2025
“Many of today’s cannabis consumers are ‘middle American’ adults, employed, own a home, vote regularly, pay their taxes and are involved in their communities.”
By Bob Sillick, Iowa Capital Dispatch
For many years, cannabis users were characterized as a cult of stoners: young, often unemployed, party animals. That sector still exists in some form, however, many of today’s cannabis consumers are “middle American” adults, employed, own a home, vote regularly, pay their taxes and are involved in their communities.
That is the general profile of adult cannabis consumers across the country and in Des Moines, according to a recent survey by Consumer Research Around Cannabis/The Media Audit.
The Media Audit, the parent company of Consumer Research Around Cannabis, is an international research company serving 80+ local markets in the U.S. and Canada for more than 20 years. It started gathering data about cannabis use and attitudes in 2016.
Although the sale of adult recreational cannabis is illegal in Iowa, the survey found 16.2 percent of all adults age 18+ in Des Moines said they used or bought cannabis during the past month, or the statistical equivalent of approximately 140,000 adults.
The smallest percentage in the following table, monthly usage in Des Moines, is still substantial—and suggests a pent-up market. Unleashing the recreational cannabis market in Des Moines and all of Iowa would likely generate jobs and significant taxes for the state—money now escaping across the borders.
The survey data from Des Moines and 42 other markets was aggregated and showed 24.1 percent of adults 18+ used or bought cannabis during the past month. (Local factors affect these percentages and comparisons.)
For 15 years, Jonathan Caulkins, H. Guyford Stever professor of operations research and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University’s Heinz College, has been studying cannabis legalization. He is also the author of several books on the topic and a member of the Commission on the North American Opioid Crisis.
Caulkins’s research fine-tunes the results of the Des Moines survey from Consumer Research Around Cannabis.
“From 1992 through 2023, the most recent year for which we have released data, the trend has been towards an enormous increase in the number of people who are using cannabis daily or near daily. They account for 80 percent of recreational cannabis sales. They dominate the market,” Caulkins said.
In states like Iowa that haven’t legalized adult recreational cannabis, Caulkins expects when they do, the middle of the market will be blue-collar high-school graduates, adults 25–40 who are employed but not affluent.
He has also seen a gender trend as more states allow the sale of recreational cannabis.
“As cannabis has become more legal, the male/female use gap has become noticeably smaller. When it was an illegal action or a risky action, there was a much bigger gender gap, but that gap is declining. Use by men is increasing with legalization, use by women is increasing even more,” he said.
Cannabis consumers in Des Moines also align with the 43-market survey when comparing gender and income. Millennials at 42.3 percent and Gen Xers at 35.5 percent account for three-quarters of the adult cannabis consumers in Des Moines who bought or used cannabis during the past month. These percentages are slightly more than the 43-market survey at 41.5 percent and 28.2 percent, respectively. The 33.8 percent of cannabis consumers in Des Moines with household incomes of $35,000 to $75,000 is also slightly more than the 43-market survey at 29.6 percent.
The Consumer Research Around Cannabis data also profiles cannabis consumers at a more granular level. The “household profile” category shows which three were the largest purchasers or users of cannabis during the past year, or 33.8 percent collectively.
- Affluent, no children at home: $75,000+ household income
- Affluent white-collar worker: Family income $100,000+
- Affluent Boomers: $100,000+ household income
Comparing cannabis purchasers and users in Des Moines with the 43-market survey by their employment status and occupation reveals some contrasts. The data indicates that many in Des Moines are working and contributing to the local economy.
Voting is a meaningful measure of civic responsibility. Millennials at 22 percent, Gen Xers at 54.4 percent and Baby Boomers at 12 percent who purchased or used cannabis during the past month voted in local, state and national elections, compared to 33 percent, 32.1 percent and 24.6 percent, respectively, in the 43-market aggregate survey.
This particular data point may have ramifications for future legislative efforts to legalize adult recreational cannabis sales in Iowa. While the Iowa Legislature’s majority Republicans have rebuffed Democrats’ proposals to legalize recreational marijuana, advocates suggest time may be on their side if an increasing body of citizens support legalization with their votes.
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Here’s Where To Buy Legal Recreational Marijuana In Delaware Next Month

Published
6 hours agoon
July 6, 2025
All seven medical marijuana operators have converted to adult-use cannabis sales, with over 10 locations, which will be up and running in August.
By Brianna Hill, Spotlight Delaware
Delaware will begin recreational marijuana sales on August 1, state officials announced Tuesday, putting the first definitive date on the start of a long-awaited rollout for the $280 million industry.
Customers on that first day will be heading to existing medical marijuana businesses though, as the burgeoning legal market has yet to develop the dozens of new businesses licensed for recreational-only sales.
That decision has already sparked criticism from advocates and residents, who say it puts other businesses at an unfair disadvantage.
For years, medical marijuana dispensaries have denied that they sought the handful of licenses available at the time in order to get a first-adopter advantage for the eventual recreational market. But now that is occurring.
“The existing medical marijuana dispensaries lobbied for less competition and to begin sales before new businesses, and now, with the [Office of the Marijuana Commissioner]-caused delays, they will end up with first sales and absolutely no competition,” Zoë Patchell, president of the Delaware Cannabis Advocacy Network, which advocated for years for legalization, wrote in a Facebook post.
Delaware medical marijuana dispensaries

Jacob Owens, Spotlight Delaware / Source: Delaware Office of the Marijuana Commissioner / Created with Datawrapper
- First State Compassion–Wilmington, 37 Germay Drive, Wilmington http://firststatecompassion.com
- First State Compassion–Lewes, 12000 Old Vine Blvd., Unit 102, Lewes
- http://firststatecompassion.com
- Fresh Cannabis, 635 N. Dupont Blvd., Milford
- https://freshdelaware.com/
- Columbia Care Delaware, 200 S. DuPont Blvd., Smyrna
- https://col-carede.com/
- Columbia Care Delaware, 5606 Concord Pike, Wilmington
- https://col-carede.com/
- Columbia Care Delaware, 36725 Bayside Outlet Drive, Suite 760, Rehoboth Beach
- https://col-carede.com/
- Field Supply, 4543 Kirkwood Highway, Wilmington
- https://thefieldsupply.com
- Fresh Cannabis, 800 Ogletown Road, Newark
- https://freshdelaware.com/
- Fresh Cannabis, 22983 Sussex Highway, Seaford
- https://freshdelaware.com/
- The Farm, 105 Irish Hill Road, Felton
- https://www.thefarmde.com
- The Farm, 240 S. Dupont Highway, New Castle
- https://www.thefarmde.com
- Best Buds, 516 Jefferic Blvd., Dover
- https://www.bestbuds.com
- Best Buds, 23 Georgetown Plaza, Georgetown
- https://bestbuds.com
Delaware’s adult-use marijuana industry, which was legalized in 2023, allowed for 125 licensees to operate throughout the state across cultivation, manufacturing, testing and retail sales. The operators were chosen at the end of last year through a lottery system that saw more than 1,200 individuals apply.
Entering the licensing lottery alone required individuals to submit detailed applications and fees. Most application fees cost $5,000, with the active license itself costing up to $10,000.
Medical marijuana operators seeking to enter the recreational market were required to pay steep conversion fees—$100,000 for retail or manufacturing licenses and $200,000 for cultivation.
The state used the revenue to create a $4 million reimbursement fund for social equity applicants, defined as individuals with prior marijuana-related convictions or those from communities disproportionately impacted by prior marijuana enforcement.
Since March, business operators have been awaiting clarity from the Office of the Marijuana Commissioner (OMC), the state office in charge of regulating the industry, on when sales could legally begin.
The market’s launch was originally slated for April but faced delays after the state failed to secure FBI approval to conduct background checks on licensees.
As of June 18, 43 individuals have cleared their background checks, according to OMC spokeswoman Keila Montalvo. The office did not respond to requests for information on how many conditional licenses have been issued.
Even as an official date is set, state lawmakers are still trying to revise the law that made recreational sales legal.
The law permitted municipalities to prohibit marijuana businesses from their jurisdictions and gave counties broad authority to dictate where they could locate, but those allowances have led a third of Delaware towns and cities to opt out of allowing marijuana shops and Sussex County to place significant restrictions on locations.
A bill to lessen those restrictions has passed both the House and Senate and now awaits consideration from Gov. Matt Meyer (D).
All seven medical marijuana operators have converted to adult-use cannabis sales, with over 10 locations, which will be up and running in August.
Given the ongoing barriers faced by other licensees, including strict local zoning rules, delayed funding for social equity applicants and pending conditional license approvals, the early start for medical marijuana businesses could give them a major head start in shaping the market.
“Our focus is on building a safe, equitable, and accountable marijuana market that delivers real benefits to Delawareans. We will continue to issue conditional licenses to previously selected applicants to ensure they can begin operations once active,” Joshua Sanderlin, Delaware’s new marijuana commissioner, said in a statement.
This story was first published by Spotlight Delaware.
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