Steve Hager’s High Times Legacy

Steve Hager transformed High Times from a chaotic drug tabloid into a spiritual and cultural force for cannabis. Discover how he created the Cannabis Cup, popularized 420, and built the foundation of modern cannabis culture in this deep dive into his legacy.

Dead Shows, Dirty Deals: Inside the Lot Economy in 2025

The modern Shakedown Street runs on rosin, burner phones, and crypto. From Saratoga busts to Las Vegas dab rigs, Pot Culture goes inside the gray market fueling Deadhead tours, Phish lots, and festival parking lots nationwide. It’s not nostalgia. It’s a moving economy built on risk, trust, and tanks. This is the real show.

Sly Stone Dead at 82: The Revolution Will Still Be Funky

Sly Stone, the funk pioneer who turned gospel into psychedelic revolution, has died at 82. From explosive highs to haunting disappearances, his life played like the records he left behind—loud, raw, and unforgettable. Pot Culture traces the legacy, chaos, and cultural firestorm of the man who made music bend to his will. Rest in power.

Pot Was Never Meant to Be Polite

Weed didn’t survive because it was polite. It survived because it was radical, risky, and rebellious. This cultural editorial calls out the corporate whitewashing of cannabis and drags the worst offenders, including Seth Rogen, for turning the movement into a lifestyle brand. Pot Was Never Meant to Be Polite is a wake-up call for anyone who forgot where this all started.

David Johansen & The New York Dolls: Punk, Pot & Rebellion

David Johansen and the New York Dolls epitomized raw rebellion in the '70s, defying social norms and influencing punk rock culture. While cannabis lingered in the background of their scene, heroin's toll was devastating. Today’s legalization poses questions about authenticity vs. commercialization in counterculture, challenging the legacy of Johansen’s defiance.

Why Do We Call It Getting ‘High’?

The term "high" has historical roots, symbolizing elevation and transcendence. Its popularity surged through the 19th century and the jazz era, cemented by the 1960s counterculture. While alternative terms like "lifted" and "baked" exist, "high" resonates due to its brevity and significance in the intoxication lexicon. Different cultures use varied expressions for the euphoric state.

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Up ↑