You took an edible at noon. Now you’re sweating, spiraling, and trying not to cry behind a porta-potty. From hydration hacks to panic code words, this stoner survival guide is here to help you ride the edible wave without crashing in the middle of Trombone Shorty’s set. Because nobody wants to melt down at a music fest.
Cheech and Chong’s Last Movie Review: Brotherly Love, Bullsh*t, and the Long Strange Trip Home
Cheech and Chong’s Last Movie isn’t a stoner flick, it’s a raw, trippy confessional from two counterculture icons who shaped comedy and cannabis forever. With Dave Bushell behind the camera, the film blends archival chaos, animation, and unresolved tension into a story about brotherhood, pain, and legacy. It's not just a documentary. It’s an honest trip home.
Can Congress Fix Weed, or Just Finish Off the Movement?
Congressman Dave Joyce wants credit for fixing weed. But his new legislation might just carve up the movement and hand it to corporate stakeholders. Behind the clean language is a blueprint for state-by-state chaos, not freedom. If this is legalization, it’s legalization without justice—and the people who built the culture are still waiting outside the gates.
DEA Stalls on Cannabis Rescheduling: What’s the Hold-Up?
The DEA is dragging its feet on cannabis rescheduling despite over 43,000 public comments and a formal Schedule III recommendation from HHS. What’s the hold-up? This deep-dive exposes the legal limbo, political stall tactics, and why America’s weed policy is still frozen in time.
Cannabis vs. Cancer: New Study Finds Overwhelming Scientific Support
A massive new meta-analysis reviewed over 10,000 cannabis-related cancer studies and found that nearly 75% showed therapeutic benefit. From nausea relief to potential tumor suppression, the science is no longer fringe. This isn’t a breakthrough—it’s a reckoning with decades of delay, stigma, and denial. The question now is: what’s still standing in the way?
420 in the Age of Legalization: What’s Left to Fight For?
The celebration of 4/20 has shifted from its original meaning of rebellion and community to a commercialized event reflecting empty promises. Despite legalization in many states, disparities persist, with ongoing arrests and barriers for marginalized communities. True significance lies in honoring the past and the fight for genuine justice in cannabis culture.