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Ozzy Osbourne, Prince Of Darkness And Counterculture Legend, Dies At 76

Published
12 hours agoon

John Michael “Ozzy” Osbourne has passed away at the age of 76. Known to most as the frontman of Black Sabbath and a solo force of nature, Ozzy wasn’t just the godfather of heavy metal — he was one of us. A weed-smoking, boundary-breaking, chaos-loving rock and roll outlaw who never stopped waving the freak flag, even when the rest of the world begged him to tone it down.
Ozzy didn’t just play music that stoners loved. He lived it. Every blown speaker, every thunderous Sabbath riff, every moment of madness on stage or screen was touched by the same rebel spirit that flows through this community.
The Sound and the Fury: Ozzy’s Legacy in Music and Culture
Ozzy Osbourne didn’t just sing the soundtrack to generations of outcasts, rebels, and stoners; he was the soundtrack. His voice was the electric howl in a world too buttoned-up to deal with the weirdos and wild ones. From the back alleys of Birmingham to the stages of the world’s biggest festivals, Ozzy changed what music could sound like, what it could feel like, and who it was for.
Black Sabbath and the Birth of Heavy Metal
Before Black Sabbath, rock was loud. After Black Sabbath, it had teeth. Formed in 1968 with Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, and Bill Ward, Sabbath didn’t just tweak the blues — they dragged it through the graveyard and set it on fire. Their music was slow, heavy, and filled with the existential dread of working-class life. And right in the middle of it was Ozzy, wailing like a banshee from another dimension.
The first four Sabbath albums, Black Sabbath, Paranoid, Master of Reality, and Vol. 4, were seismic. These records practically invented heavy metal, doom, and stoner rock all in one shot. Songs like “War Pigs,” “Iron Man,” and “Children of the Grave” didn’t just sound angry. They were warnings. They were visions. And they were blaring out of every stoner van, basement jam session, and midnight radio station across the world.
Ozzy’s voice, soaring, cracked, unmistakable, cut through the fuzz like a siren. It wasn’t trained or pretty. It was raw truth. When he screamed, it sounded like someone waking up from a nightmare they couldn’t escape. Which made sense. He’d lived one.
The Solo Years: Reinvention and Madness
After being fired from Sabbath in 1979, most people thought Ozzy was done. But like a phoenix made of amp feedback and beer cans, he came back stronger. With guitarist Randy Rhoads at his side, he dropped Blizzard of Ozz in 1980, launching his solo career with “Crazy Train,” “Mr. Crowley,” and “Suicide Solution.” It wasn’t just a comeback. It was a declaration of war on the idea that aging rockers had to fade away.
Throughout the ’80s and ’90s, Ozzy’s solo work pushed the boundaries of what heavy metal could be. He embraced theatrics, leaned into his darkness, and never stopped chasing the next riff. “No More Tears,” “Bark at the Moon,” and “Shot in the Dark” kept him at the top of the game while dozens of his peers faded into nostalgia acts.
Ozzy wasn’t interested in nostalgia. He wanted noise. He wanted mayhem. And somehow, in all that chaos, he kept evolving.
Cultural Impact: From Satanic Panic to Reality TV Saint
Ozzy’s music was the subject of Senate hearings, church protests, and parent group boycotts. He was accused of promoting suicide, satanism, drug use, and madness. What they didn’t understand was that Ozzy wasn’t glamorizing darkness. He was surviving it. And in doing so, he helped millions of fans feel seen, heard, and a little less alone.
In 2002, Ozzy reintroduced himself to the world with The Osbournes, MTV’s hit reality show that flipped the script on celebrity life. Instead of a rock god in a castle of sin, we got a bumbling, hilarious, constantly confused Ozzy trying to find the TV remote while Sharon kept the household together. It was chaotic, real, and pure gold. And yes, he admitted years later he was “stoned the whole time.”
That show didn’t just revive his career. It made him relatable to an entirely new generation. Your parents may have feared him in the ’70s. Your little sister was watching him try to find his slippers on cable.
Why He Was and Still Is an Icon
Ozzy Osbourne was more than his music, his scandals, or his bat-eating headlines. He represented a kind of authenticity that’s almost impossible to find. He didn’t pretend to be perfect. He wasn’t polished. He struggled, and he let us see that struggle, sometimes with humor, sometimes with horror. But always honestly.
For the High Times community, Ozzy was one of the real ones. He smoked the weed. He made the music. He lived the life. He never chased trends, never sold out his strangeness, and never forgot where he came from.
His impact can be heard in every doom-metal record, every psych-stoner album, and every gritty riff that dares to slow things down and turn the volume way up. His fingerprints are all over metal, but also in fashion, film, pop culture, and even the normalization of cannabis and mental health conversations in the public square.
There will never be another Ozzy. Not because others won’t try, but because Ozzy never tried to be anyone but Ozzy. And that’s what made him immortal.
The Sweet Leaf Was Always Burning
Ask any real head and they’ll tell you, Sweet Leaf wasn’t just a Sabbath track. It was an anthem. Recorded in 1971 after the band discovered a particularly potent stash in Dublin, the song kicks off with Tony Iommi coughing after a hit. That wasn’t a gimmick. That was real. Ozzy loved to talk about that session, the room thick with smoke, the creativity flowing like lava, the band riding the high and crafting what would become the foundation of stoner metal.
Years later, Ozzy graced the cover of High Times in 1999 with Tony Iommi. The shoot involved mountains of fake weed and a wild sense of déjà vu. During the interview, Ozzy didn’t try to polish anything. He talked about getting high, getting lost, and somehow finding himself in the madness. The High Times staff still talks about that day like it was a pilgrimage. And it was.
From Chaos to Cult Hero
Ozzy’s story is full of contradictions. He was a global rock star, yet always felt like an outsider. He battled demons, addiction, illness, and fame, but never lost the part of himself that spoke to misfits and dreamers. When he was lost in the haze, he found a strange kind of clarity. And when the world tried to laugh him off, he leaned in harder. He made the freaks feel like family.
You didn’t have to meet him to know him. If you were the kid getting high behind the bleachers, if you were the one blasting Sabbath in your garage, if you lit up and let your mind melt into the fuzzed-out solo of Fairies Wear Boots, Ozzy was there. He understood you. He was you.
Legacy Lit in Smoke
Ozzy was never a preacher, but he knew the value of plant medicine. In recent years, he admitted to microdosing marijuana for his health, calling it his “spark.” He never dove into psychedelics the way some do today, but he respected the plants. He believed cannabis should be legal. He thought it was less dangerous than booze, less toxic than tobacco, and far more fun.
He leaves behind not just a discography that defined generations, but a cultural footprint that’s forever green. The cannabis community has always claimed Ozzy as one of our own. He was loud, raw, real, and unfiltered. He didn’t just talk about rebellion; he lived it, inhaled it, and exhaled it back into the mic.
Recap: Ozzy Osbourne’s Infamous High Times Interview (March 1999)
When High Times put Ozzy Osbourne and Tony Iommi on the cover in March 1999, it wasn’t just a tribute to two heavy metal legends; it was a weed-soaked time capsule of Black Sabbath’s chaotic, cannabis-fueled heyday.
A Life Measured in Smoke
Ozzy didn’t hold back. He told High Times that in the early Sabbath days, they weren’t just dabbling; they were consuming pounds of weed, sometimes by the sack. Their daily ritual began and ended with joints, and the haze of cannabis was the backdrop to Sabbath’s heaviest tracks, including “Sweet Leaf,” which was inspired by their first hit of potent Irish hash.
“We used to smoke pounds of the shit, man… Wake up in the morning, start the day with a spliff, and go to bed with it.”
This wasn’t just storytelling; it was testimony. Ozzy credited cannabis with enhancing their creative energy, giving him focus before going on stage, and providing relief from the storm inside his head.
Madness at the Border
One of the standout stories from the interview was Ozzy’s memory of trying to smuggle weed across the border from Detroit into Canada using a homemade contraption built from a fish-tank pump. Sabbath were weed pirates risking arrest, failing often, and laughing about it decades later.
“At the Canadian border, we got even worse, man…”
It painted a portrait of a band who didn’t just sing about rebellion — they lived it, even when it meant facing the wrath of border agents with bloodshot eyes and backpacks full of bad ideas.
Cannabis vs. Cigarettes
Ozzy also used the platform to make a clear argument for cannabis legalization. While he openly battled addiction to harder drugs and alcohol, he separated weed from the rest, seeing it not as a problem, but as a plant with healing and creative power.
“I couldn’t smoke as many joints a day as I can [cigarettes]… Gotta legalize pot. I’m all for it.”
To Ozzy, pot was natural. Tobacco and other processed substances were worse. His views, shared with High Times in 1999, echoed ahead of the cultural curve, calling for plant freedom long before mainstream politicians dared.
Why It Mattered
This interview wasn’t just memorable; it was legendary. It captured Ozzy in full mythic form, simultaneously unhinged and deeply human. Fans got a raw look at the stoner roots of Black Sabbath, but also saw a glimmer of the man behind the madness: honest, funny, and surprisingly thoughtful about the role cannabis played in his life.
The High Times 1999 feature remains one of the most re-shared and re-quoted stories from the magazine’s rock archives. For the cannabis community, it cemented Ozzy not just as a metal icon but as one of us.
A Final Blaze
Today, joints are being lit around the world in honor of the man who gave us Sweet Leaf, Children of the Grave, and a thousand reasons to scream into the night. He was weird, he was wild, and he was honest about all of it.
Rest easy, Ozzy. The smoke will never clear.
This article is from an external, unpaid contributor. It does not represent High Times’ reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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MINNESOTA WANTS YOU! (To Name Its New Official THC Gummy)

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Minnesota’s relationship with weed is getting more creative by the minute.
As the state rolls out its recreational cannabis sales in 2025, one city is already making headlines with a bold, very berry-flavored move: launching its own line of government-branded THC gummies. But that’s not all. They’re asking residents to help name them.
Welcome to Eden Prairie, a Minneapolis suburb that just became the first municipality in Minnesota to put out a city-sponsored weed edible. Crafted “specifically for sleep,” each mixed-berry gummy contains 5mg of THC and 30mg of CBN, a cannabinoid known for its calming properties. The 10-packs will be sold at local Eden Prairie Liquor stores for $19.99, starting this fall.
“This isn’t just any gummy. It’s our gummy,” the city declared in its call for submissions. “It deserves a name as bold, vibrant, and unforgettable as the Eden Prairie community itself.” What are they looking for? Basically: the best, brightest or weirdest name idea.
The rules are simple:
- You must be 21 or older and live in Eden Prairie.
- No profanity, politics, or self-referential names.
- One entry per person.
- Submissions open through July 29.
- The top 3 names will be posted on Facebook for public voting August 4–8.
- The winner gets their chosen name on the product—and a free gummy pack!
That’s right. Legal weed, straight from the city… and your idea could be all over it.
Local control + legal creativity
While Minnesota legalized adult-use cannabis in 2023, dispensaries won’t open statewide until next year. In the meantime, hemp-derived THC products like these gummies are completely legal under a 2022 law that quietly kickstarted a green rush in gas stations, liquor stores, and even state fairs.
Now, cities like Eden Prairie are taking things into their own hands.
“Beer and wine sales are down. The category of growth is THC,” said Paul Kaspszak, Executive Director of the Minnesota Municipal Beverage Association. “The future is now, so you might as well find any advantage you can.”
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With that in mind, the city clearly pays attention and brings solutions to its citizens by crafting a gentle but effective edible-focused efforts. The high dose of CBN paired with low-dose THC is ideal for people looking to wind down.
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Send this to your Minnesotan friends and tell them: NAME! THAT! GUMMY!
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“The supply chain will remain intact. You’ll be able to move that material in and out freely, and you should do so.”
By Rebecca Rivas, Missouri Independent
The head of Missouri’s cannabis testing unit said the new unannounced visits to collect product samples shouldn’t impact business, in a podcast by the Missouri Cannabis Regulation Division.
“This is going to be just another arm of compliance, guys,” said Ryan Bernard, the division’s testing and research unit manager. “So keep this business as usual 100 percent of the time.”
On July 1, cannabis regulators began arriving unannounced at licensed cultivation and manufacturing facilities to collect products off the shelves. They’ll take them to the Missouri State Public Health Reference Laboratory to be tested for things like mold, pesticides and a whole range of other things.
Bernard said the process will not disrupt production, and it will be paid for by “either by DCR’s budget or state public health lab’s budget.”
“The supply chain will remain intact,” he said, “You’ll be able to move that material in and out freely, and you should do so.”
His team is looking to sample four to seven grams of final finished marijuana goods. If a package has more than four to seven grams, he said then they’ll take the whole package.
“I just want to reiterate that it’s going to start as one tag per facility, meaning that we’re not looking to take 10 tags from a single facility,” Bernard said. “Then as the infrastructure is developed at the state public health lab, we’ll slowly start increasing that out.”
Bernard said he’ll be randomly selecting based on the inventory listed in the state’s seed-to-sale tracking system called Metrc.
“If it’s today, I would go into our seed-to-sale system, pull your inventory down and then just randomly select a sample to come to your facility to take,” he said.
If a product fails at the reference lab, he said his team will return to the facility to collect a “full representative sample.”
“If that product fails at that point, we’re going to initiate an investigation,” he said. “If the material is no longer available at the originating facility, at that point, we may sample from dispensaries.”
Like most states, all testing of Missouri cannabis products occurs at private labs that have been licensed by the state. This is the division’s first attempt to double check the work of licensed testing labs tasked with ensuring the safety of Missouri marijuana products.
Lawmakers began allocating money for this kind of sampling to be tested at the state laboratory in the fiscal year that began on July 1, 2024 with $3.8 million. Most of it went unspent because the cannabis testing methods were “still in the process of being implemented,” according to state budget documents. Another $2.4 million was allocated for the current fiscal year, and it’s unclear how much of it has been spent.
States across the nation are taking similar proactive steps to establish reference laboratories to verify private laboratory cannabis testing, according to the division’s July press release announcing the testing.
“This reference lab will be a pivotal step forward in the evolution of reliable, science-based cannabis testing protocols,” said Amy Moore, the division’s director. “We are grateful for all the expertise and collaboration from many state and national partners, especially from the Missouri State Public Health Laboratory, that helped launch this initiative for Missouri.”

Author: mscannabiz.com
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