Our June cover isn’t just soaking up sun, it’s sparking something bigger. This is what freedom looks like when you stop asking for permission. No brands, no filters, no apologies, just heat, smoke, and a cultural fuck-you to anyone trying to roll back progress. High tides, higher rebellion.
Stash and Snitch: Why Reddit’s Weed Confessionals Are a Trap
Users think Reddit is a safe space for stoner stories. It’s not. With IP logs, subpoenas, and deleted posts preserved on request, digital weed culture has become a self-incrimination trap. Pot Culture exposes the myth of anonymity and the real risks of online oversharing.
Looks Like Cola, Tastes Like Bud: Haribo’s Accidental High
Haribo recalled its Happy Cola gummies in the Netherlands after reports of cannabis contamination left some consumers, including kids, feeling dizzy. The media lost its mind, lawsuits are brewing, and we’re just here wondering if they need help “disposing” of the evidence. A sharp look at panic, edibles, and the gummy-shaped gray area between outrage and overreaction.
Celebrity Strains: The Rise of Star-Backed Cannabis Brands
Celebrity weed is everywhere, flashy, overpriced, and often full of mids. This piece rips the gloss off the jars and calls out the marketing machine hijacking cannabis culture. Real smokers know the difference between herb and hype. This is your wake-up call.
Burn After Legalizing: How States Are Screwing Legacy Growers
Legacy growers fought for legalization, only to be pushed aside by the system they helped create. This feature exposes how red tape, taxes, and policy failures are locking out the real pioneers while corporate weed cashes in. It’s not just exclusion—it’s cultural erasure. And if we’re not careful, the soul of cannabis will vanish under glossy branding and mediocre bud.
Reefer Saints and Sinners: The Outlaw Monks of Marijuana
Before weed went corporate and clean, it was kept alive by outlaws in flannel and flip-flops who risked prison to protect a plant. These weren’t boardroom visionaries or brand ambassadors—they were underground botanists, seed smugglers, and clone-hustling legends. From Nevil’s skunky Dutch castles to the hills of Kentucky and the grow rooms of California, this is the real origin story of cannabis culture one built with grit, guts, and a middle finger to the system.