In Part Two of our exclusive interview with former High Times Magazine Editor-in-Chief Chris Simunek, the conversation turns raw. From outlaw growers and underground legends to lost friends and a culture gutted by greed, Simunek reflects on the rise and fall of cannabis journalism. This is not nostalgia. This is what the movement lost when legalization cashed in.
Chris Simunek and the Culture They Tried to Bury
In this exclusive interview, Chris Simunek, former Editor in Chief of High Times, reflects on the outlaw era of cannabis culture when speaking up about weed was a risk, not content. He takes us inside the raw and rebellious movement that existed before legalization and corporate cannabis.
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.