Stuff You Should Know - The Ballad of High Times Magazine

Episode Date: January 21, 2025

Whether you’re 20.5 or 50, if you love pot then High Times was the magazine for you. With ton of photos of marijuana, tips for how to grow it yourself, and other illegal stuff, High Times hung i...n there long enough to go from outlaw to mainstream.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:01:14 Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too and we're just hanging out feeling iree. You're in stuff you should know. Did you ever, I mean, I'm gonna ask you two questions. Did you ever read High Times much and did you ever subscribe? I never subscribed. I was way too paranoid to do something like that.
Starting point is 00:01:40 But yes, I read it, I looked at the pictures. Yeah, I think for, I looked at the pictures. Yeah, I think for one year in college, I actually subscribed because, and this is High Times Magazine, we're talking about everybody, the, I was gonna say Notorious, but not really Notorious, the infamous Weed Magazine.
Starting point is 00:01:59 Sure. But I subscribed for I think a year because it just seemed like, you know, I wanted to have that house, like that had that on the coffee table with our address on it I just thought it was like the cool thing to do. You know yeah I mean it was legitimately cool during a certain period of life Yeah, like if you were 50 doing that it's kind of sad But if you're like 20 or 19 or 21 or 20 and a half, let's
Starting point is 00:02:26 say, then yeah, I get it. Watch what you say though. I've learned from recent emails, there may be a 50 year old out there that thinks side time is cool, that's going to be very upset. Yeah, it's true. But I mean, do they have it on their coffee table? I don't know. I think that's the thing that's getting me. Even when I did read it occasionally, I even at the time was like, this is the articles, the way they were written,
Starting point is 00:02:48 there were so many puns, it was so kind of corny. Yeah. And so it never felt like as good as I think they might've thought it was. Does that make sense? Yeah, and also one of the other things too, I was gonna say you could sense it, but no, it was just really overt,
Starting point is 00:03:05 was they had an agenda in every single one of their articles. There was a way they wanted you to think, which is their position on it, and they would like mock the other position on it, typically the government's position on like legalization or something like that. Yeah, good point.
Starting point is 00:03:21 Over time though, I mean, it became, it's an iconic magazine. Like, pretty much everybody's heard of High Times. If you've never even picked one up, there's a good chance you've heard of High Times or somebody referencing High Times. It's like, it insinuated itself into American pop culture. And the reason why it became iconic
Starting point is 00:03:40 is it survived all sorts of drug culture transitions. Like throughout all these different like ways of thinking and looking at drugs and different drugs people were doing, High Times managed to just keep plotting along and stay relevant I guess is the best way to put it. I didn't think I was gonna say that out loud but here we are. Yeah, for sure. From the, yeah, let's just get into it then. Okay. No more needs to be added. I agree, I agree.
Starting point is 00:04:10 So, High Times was founded by a guy named Thomas King Forsad. And I just realized I didn't look up any videos of people pronouncing his name, but I'm pretty sure that's how it's spelled. Wow, I was so ready to roll with fourcade. Well, I've seen the little French version of the Oomlaut, the little devil's tail coming off of the bottom of the sea.
Starting point is 00:04:33 Oh, okay. And that indicates a sound, if my high school French doesn't fail me. So I think his name was Thomas King Forsad. All right, great. He looks like, if you look up this guy, when I went to look up, I'd never seen a picture of him. I expected, I didn't expect to see someone so cool looking.
Starting point is 00:04:51 I mean, he looks like he stepped right out of the Allman Brothers band or something. I was gonna say, he looks like the Allman Brothers satanic advisor. Yeah, for sure. And if you're thinking like, what do you mean? It was like a pot magazine. Why do you think he'd be cool?
Starting point is 00:05:04 It's because I usually expect them to look sort of like wavy gravy. Any like weed activist to be just decked out in tie-dye and kind of just wearing some sort of wacky handmade hat. And this guy, he looked like he could jump off of a chopper and like hit the stage or something, you know? Yeah, and you know that same 50-year-old who's upset because I said something about high times
Starting point is 00:05:28 on his coffee table. He's pretty much a wavy gravy look-alike too. Yeah, he's wearing his own handmade knit hat. So this guy, Thomas King Forsad, it's a pretty cool name. And if it sounds made up, it is made up. His real name was Gary Goodson. Um, and it's not because his name was Gary Goodson that he ditched that name in favor of Thomas King Forsad.
Starting point is 00:05:52 Uh, he was actually a big, big time pot dealer. Like not only did he sell literal tons of pot in like the, I think starting in the late 60s and going well into, past the time he was, had started publishing High Times, he smuggled it himself. He flew planes and he went to Mexico, he went to Jamaica, and he smuggled pot, tons of pot at a time, into the United States. There was a quote I found of his that he said, there's two types of pot dealers, those who
Starting point is 00:06:30 need a forklift and those who don't. I need a forklift. And like he wasn't joking, like he really dealt that much pot. Yeah. So, I mean, regardless of how you feel about that or him or any of it, he wasn't just some guy saying like, hey, let's try and make a little dough off of this marijuana people are smoking. Like he was knee deep in the business. This was after coming out of seemingly to avoid the Vietnam draft, a short stint in
Starting point is 00:07:00 the air guard where he was discharged after convincing them that he had schizophrenia. And at that point, he went back to Arizona in Phoenix, changed that name, which was his mother's, I'm sorry, grandmother's maiden name, and, you know, got into the underground zine scene. You know, that was a big thing back in the late 60s because of the ubiquity of, like, being able to print your own stuff in an office or a, I don't know if they had Kinkos back then, but he got into those and founded
Starting point is 00:07:29 his own first underground magazine called Orpheus, which had some politics to it, but it was kind of just a little groovy psychedelic thing that covered like music and pot and stuff. Tell them about the issue with the peace sign in the bullet hole. Yeah, there was a peace sign on the cover that actually had a real bullet hole. So instead of just drawing a bullet hole, he shot them up himself. Yeah, he shot bundles of stacks wrapped together with the Colt.45 handgun to really kind of drive the point home. I mean, it's creative. That is an underground zine right there if it has a bullet hole in it that the publisher put there
Starting point is 00:08:09 That's really something. Yeah, I'm with real blood right you said something I think is really worth pointing out because there's a whole camp of people who tell this origin story of high times and Thomas King for saw that is like just some Money-making scheme or just a lark or something like that. This guy in actuality was a dedicated First Amendment warrior, like dedicated. And also he was very committed to the counterculture, not just because he sold tons of weed, but he genuinely believed in legalizing marijuana, that that was a crucial thing to do in the United States. And he put his money where his mouth is,
Starting point is 00:08:51 and like he said, he started with underground zines, and then he took up, I saw that he joined or he founded, I couldn't tell which one was correct, what's basically like an associated press for underground magazines. It was called the Underground Press Syndicate, and I think it changed its name to something else, right? I'm not sure.
Starting point is 00:09:11 I always saw it called UPS. Well, we'll just call it that. But it was, like I said, the AP where you could get all sorts of news about drug busts or about some spectacular pot harvest or something to do with underground culture. And you could just print it in your local mag and the people in Phoenix are reading the same thing as the people in Denver, but they don't know that. They just think it's like part of your magazine.
Starting point is 00:09:38 Yeah. And he eventually worked his way up to national coordinator for the underground press syndicate. And that's where he learned how to run a magazine basically. That's how he learned about ad deals, distribution, printing, like efficient printing, real printing. For a little while, and I figure we should probably do something on Abbie Hoffman and the Yippies at some point. All right. As a... You don't want wanna highlight boomers, do you? No, it's not that.
Starting point is 00:10:08 I just think that guy's gotten more than enough of his spotlight, but yes, it's- All right, you know what, then forget it. Okay. Wow, I didn't think I was gonna talk you out on that one. Hey, if you wanna learn about Abbie Hoffman, you're not gonna learn about it here, everybody. Go steal his book.
Starting point is 00:10:23 Yeah, or read. Very nice. I got that one. So he did join up with Hoffman, though, and his Yippies. Again, if you wanna read about them, they were a group that did a lot of kind of social pranks and media grab, you know, activist stuff for their radical causes. In 1970, for Said, forsaid, facade, you said?
Starting point is 00:10:47 Yeah, because if you take out the O, and change, no, if you change the O to an A and take out the R, you've got facade, like the front of a building. So I'm making an educated guess here. I think you're probably right, but I've been saying it wrong all day, so it's in my head. That's okay.
Starting point is 00:11:05 It's going to take a minute. That's okay. I was reading the High Times archives and I guess they had some like sixth grade trained AI scan and alter or turn all of their magazine photos into text. And boy, they came up with some creative ways of spelling that guy's name. Wow. You also sent me a lot of fun ads for cocaine paraphernalia. Dude. That was crazy. There's few things that are funner and but also more shocking than
Starting point is 00:11:31 looking at vintage cocaine paraphernalia ads that appeared in the likes of High Times and other magazines. Yeah. And there was one that I pointed out to you that was just like this thing should be in the Smithsonian. It was a metal, probably like a gold-plated coke tube. So you put one end in the coke and you put the other end up your nose and you sniff, right? Just in case you didn't know how to ingest cocaine. How'd that work? It's shaped like an old school vacuum cleaner.
Starting point is 00:12:01 And so the coke goes into the bottom of the vacuum cleaner and comes out the handle, which is up in your nose. They call it the Hoover goes into the bottom of the vacuum cleaner and comes out the handle which is up in your nose They call it the heater instead of the Hoover like whoever whoever came up with this is just that's dedication right there Because that's the kind of idea you just be like man We should totally make this but then the person actually went and made it and sold it Yeah, and then McDonald's hired them to develop their happy meal They're like this guy's really good at these tiny little bubbles. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:12:27 And if you knew what you were doing, you could clip the ends off of all those prizes and use them as cookstores. All right. So in 1970, that's where we were. Four side testified before Nixon's presidential commission on obscenity and pornography. And this is when he got a real chance to, you know, take the national stage and talk about, well, the quote was, the only obscenity is censorship. And it's the first, and I feel like we talked about this in our Pie in the Face episode.
Starting point is 00:12:59 We had to. But it's the first incident that we know of where a protest pie in the face happened when he pulled out a cream pie and face-pied Dr. Larson, Dr. Otto Larson. Yeah, who was the chairman of that committee on obscenity and pornography, right? Yeah, and that must be the first one. I mean, it's cited as the first time, you know, not in a Marx Brothers movie, somebody's like, let me make a point with this. Yeah, it was a form of protest that picked up really quick. I mean, there's few things you can do to somebody publicly that
Starting point is 00:13:34 is more disrespectful and humiliating, but also non-injurious than tying them in the face. But he did that. He was called to testify, and not only did he say that censorship is the true obscenity, he said, F censorship and F you. And then he pied the guy in the face. And a congressional hearing, this is what he did. This is just the kind of person he was. He wasn't somebody who just talked a big game.
Starting point is 00:14:03 This guy followed through on the stuff that he really believed in. Yeah, and he also let that pie sit out the day before in Phoenix so it was rotten green. Oh, God. Yuck. Should we take a break? Um, sure. All right, let's take a break, and we'll
Starting point is 00:14:19 talk about the beginnings of the magazine right after this. The New Year is the perfect excuse to reset, refocus, and try something new, like drinking more mindfully with Seedlip non-alcoholic spirits. Seedlip is a non-alcoholic spirit carefully crafted from a unique blend of botanicals and spices made to be mixed in your favorite non-out cocktails. Ask your local bartender to shake up a Seedlip cocktail for you or craft your own at home. Kick off 2025 right by visiting Seedlipdrinks.com to check out special dry January deals, recipes, and more. That's S-E D L I P D R I N K S.com.
Starting point is 00:15:06 John Stewart is back at the daily show and he's bringing his signature wit and insight straight to your ears with the daily show years edition podcast dive into John's unique take on the biggest topics in politics, entertainment, sports, and more joined by the sharp voices of the shows, correspondence and contributors. And with extended interviews and exclusive weekly headline roundups, this podcast gives you content you won't find anywhere else. Ready to laugh and stay informed?
Starting point is 00:15:35 Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Do you want to understand an invisible force that's shaping your life? I'm Osvaldo Oshin, one of the new hosts of the long running podcast Tech Stuff. I'm slightly skeptical but obsessively intrigued. And I'm Kara Price, the other new host. And I'm ready to adopt early and often. On Tech Stuff, we travel all the way from the mines of Congo to the surface of Mars to the
Starting point is 00:16:05 dark corners of TikTok to ask and attempt to answer burning questions about technology. One of the kind of tricks for surviving Mars is to live there long enough so that people evolve into Martians. Like data is a very rough proxy for a complex reality. How is it possible that the world's new energy revolution can be based in this place where there's no electricity at night? Oz and I will cut through the noise to bring you the best conversations and deep dives that will help you understand how tech is changing our world and what you need to know to survive the singularity.
Starting point is 00:16:38 So join us. Listen to tech stuff on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Tisha Olin, former golf professional and the host of Welcome to the Party, your newest obsession about the wonderful world that is women's golf. Featuring interviews with top players on tour like LPGA superstar Angel Yin. I really just sat myself down at the end of 2022 and I was like, look, either we make it or we quit. Expert tips to help improve your swing and the craziest stories to come out of your friendly neighborhood country club. The drinks were flowing, twerking all over the place, vaping, they're shotgunning. Women's golf is a wild ride full of big personalities, remarkable athleticism,
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Starting point is 00:17:57 So we've introduced our protagonist, I guess, in the first act. We can't, and Dave helped us put together this article and he points out that if you try to get, I mean you could do a whole article on this guy and talk about all the wacky things he did over the years, like concert festival promotion. He snuck allegedly pipe bombs into the 72 Republican convention. Later on he followed the Sex Pistols around and co-produced a documentary on them called DOA. Yeah, so he was a busy guy doing a lot of stuff, but this is about High Times.
Starting point is 00:18:32 So the origin story officially for High Times Magazine is that he thought of it with his friends while he was huffing nitrous oxide. Other people say it might've been an acid trip, but either way the early idea was, hey how about a magazine? Like a marijuana themed magazine. They've got Playboy and some people say like the initial idea was just a one-off kind of spoof of Playboy, but everyone that worked there said no no no the idea was always to have like a real magazine
Starting point is 00:19:05 that was cheeky and fun, but also like real journalism and tackle real topics about activism and marijuana and growing it and all that stuff. Right, exactly. Michael Kennedy, who was Forsad's personal attorney and then came on as High Times legal counsel from like the beginning until I think 2016 when he died. He explained it that High Times was meant to be a way to use free speech to teach
Starting point is 00:19:34 people how to grow pot and that like they basically had found a loophole thanks to the First Amendment that they could disseminate all this information as far and as wide as they possibly could and in teaching people to grow thanks to the First Amendment, that they could disseminate all of this information as far and as wide as they possibly could. And in teaching people to grow their own pot, that would eventually change attitudes about pot and potentially lead to legalization. And as we'll see that they were successful in that quest
Starting point is 00:19:59 that they started back in 1974. Yeah, that's right. And I think, I mean, I think it absolutely did that. I think one of the missions was, hey, let's really convince people, not convince, but let's really show people what the truth is, which is that this is a plant that can be grown.
Starting point is 00:20:19 Like plant versus, you know, illicit drug, you know? Right, or illicit drug versus illicit drug, you know? Right, or illicit drug versus illicit drug. Like at the time, the Controlled Substances Act of 1970 had just been passed thanks to Richard Nixon. And marijuana, which by the way I read is not at all racist. There was a Latino, I think historian who researched it and he's like, yeah, that's actually myth.
Starting point is 00:20:46 So good for him. That it was a schedule one, which I think it still was until like this year, which means that it has, according to the government, no medicinal value whatsoever and the high potential for abuse. And both of those are just absolute lies. They're just not correct. They're not true.
Starting point is 00:21:09 They knew this back in 1970, and that this Controlled Substances Act kicked off the war on drugs, which in retrospect, most people now agree was misguided and a huge waste of money, and killed a lot of people. And this was the era that- And incarcerated. Yes, incarcerated, it's a big one too. But it was in this era, the beginning of this era,
Starting point is 00:21:33 that high times started to kind of become not just an idea, but an actuality. So they wanted to fight that, which was part of the reason they were willing to like use mockery or just all of their articles had a slant to it because they felt like they were taking on liars. And that's a legitimate way to respond to liars is through mockery or really kind of pushing your agenda against them. But that was a huge, I think, impetus for creating High Times for sure. Yeah, absolutely. So that very first issue came out summer of 74s when it debuted.
Starting point is 00:22:09 I had a 10,000 copy print run and it didn't really light the world on fire, I guess no pun intended at first. It was, it had like an excerpt from a Timothy Leary novel, of course articles about hemp and marijuana and how great they thought it was there were some interviews and very importantly they had a Something that would you know stay in the magazine which was a feature called the trans high market market quotation Which is a a listing of like hey in Chicago. This is how much a dime bag cost This is how much it costs in New York. This is what an ounce of weed costs in Phoenix. You know, what they use, I guess they still call it street value, which I always thought
Starting point is 00:22:50 was really funny. But that's what it was, and it stayed in there for a long time, even though, as we'll talk about later, it changed a little bit over the years. But this first issue, like I said, was not, I mean, they did eventually sell out of that 10,000, but it wasn't through, it was through a lot of hustling. It wasn't like, hey, it's on your newsstand. Forsad said, here, let me get it into head shops. Let me send them to record stores. Apparently, drug dealers bought copies and gave them away to people. So it eventually did sell out the
Starting point is 00:23:22 two printings, but it was the second issue is when it really, really took off because of their, you know, kind of ingenious promotion. Well, yeah, they threw a launch party at the Gramercy Park Hotel in New York and invited like a bunch of media and just got them messed up. Like, like, like straight button down media types, journalists, some like TV news people showed up and were like giving brownies and like, here try nitrous oxide and have you ever had cocaine?
Starting point is 00:23:52 And I read a quote from Michael Kennedy, the legal counsel for high times. He said that he remembers three or four lawsuits being brought against high times from people who got so wasted for the first time in their lives that they decided to sue the magazine for it. I could see that.
Starting point is 00:24:10 Apparently it was also, if not the first, one of the first times, like, live television showed people doing drugs. There was one of the local news stations, according to Rolling Stone, showed people on camera on the news snorting cocaine, and I'm sure people at home are watching this just going like, what is going on?
Starting point is 00:24:30 But it was huge publicity, and they sold out their 50, this time 50,000 copy run in four weeks, and it became like a genuine sensation. That's when also the second issue is when they started, also as an homage to Playboy magazine, their centerfold. But of course their centerfold was always these big beautifully photographed pictures of buds, marijuana buds.
Starting point is 00:24:54 The first one, I would take issue with the idea that it was beautiful. It was a 20 pound brick of schwag. Just brown and compressed and ugly. But at the time it was like their premier weed, Colombian. of schwag, just brown and compressed and ugly. But at the time, it was like their premier weed, Colombian. And just another aside, I'm sorry about this, but I wonder, so I've always wondered in Hey 19,
Starting point is 00:25:16 the Steely Dan song, when he says the Cuervo Gold and the fine Colombian, is he talking about cocaine or is he talking about pot? And I went and researched this and I stumbled into like a long standing argument. Oh really? Yeah, I read an explanation from one person and it sounded pretty legit. They said it's a hundred percent pot that they were talking about. That's what you called really good pot.
Starting point is 00:25:40 Back in the 70s it was Colombian and it wouldn't have referred to cocaine in the first place because at that time, most of the cocaine came from Peru. Colombian farmers hadn't really taken up cocoa production. And so most people, if you were aware of cocaine, you were like, this is some fine Peruvian. You wouldn't say this is some fine Colombian. So it seems like that guy settled it, at least in my mind. Hey, that could have been the original lyric.
Starting point is 00:26:06 You never know. It depends on the day, probably. I guess it does, sure. Have you seen the Yacht Rock documentary yet on Max? No. It's pretty good. Like about the people who came up with Yacht Rock? Well, I mean, the people who came up with the term
Starting point is 00:26:22 Yacht Rock are featured in it, but it's about the genre of music. Oh, okay. So like it goes back to the 70s and 80s? Oh yeah, what else would it be about? Well, there's a band called Yacht Rock that kicked it all off, and I don't know. Oh, you mean like the Yacht Rock Revue? Yes. No, no, no, no.
Starting point is 00:26:41 Could have been going on tour with them. The term Yacht Rock came about in the early 2000s from a web comedy series. Okay. Which I never knew until I saw this documentary. But no, it's about just, you know, Christopher Cross and Michael McDonald and... Yeah. ...Seals and Croft. All the great people.
Starting point is 00:26:58 You'd enjoy it, I think. Have you seen the limited series Black Doves with Kyra Knightley? No, I have not, what's that? It's a British spy thriller, like eight or 10 episode. Say no more. Show. It's really good. I mean you can say more, but I just mean I'm into that kind of thing.
Starting point is 00:27:15 No I'm with you. No, just go watch it, I recommend it. Well see I always say these things when we're recording and then I don't remember afterward. Just text me and be like, what was the thing with the thing? And I'll know you're talking about it. Why don't you text me right now while I talk?
Starting point is 00:27:28 Black does. I don't have my phone on me, it's in the charger. Ugh. I'm sorry. That's right. So mid 70s when High Times rolls out, those very first years, the magazine was doing really well but as a sort of a new magazine. But Forsad was not.
Starting point is 00:27:46 He was on the FBI surveillance list. He was very paranoid because of the massive amounts of drugs that he was taking. Well, but also rightfully so. The FBI and possibly even the CIA was infiltrating the counterculture and planting informants. And there was a time where he was like,
Starting point is 00:28:02 there's an informant here in the high time staff, and I don't know which one of you it is. There may have been. Yeah, it's possible. Like he had reason to be paranoid at the very least, but it was definitely fueled to extremes through his drug use for sure. Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:28:16 The magazine itself was doing well, like I said, the staff, I mean, it was just, I mean, if you think like the Lampoon and Mad Magazine was kind of crazy in their office, like everybody in the high times office was huffing nitrous and smoking weed and snorting blow, like as they were working. But it was, you know, it was creating like some really relevant journalism. They were exposing, you know, government activities as far as the drug war goes. Like when putting a paraquat,
Starting point is 00:28:46 which I cannot help but think of Big Lebowski when I hear that word. I don't remember that part. It's when Jeff, when the dude called the real Lebowski a human paraquat when he was mad. I think he said human even, human paraquat. But paraquat was the pesticide that was in marijuana fields under orders from the U.S. And this article helped promote
Starting point is 00:29:14 a congressional investigation. They interviewed the Dalai Lama about drugs. There was Hunter S. Thompson and of course William S. Burroughs doing writing. There was, Truman Capote did a guest interview with Andy Warhol, Bob Marley was in it. Like it was really the heyday of that magazine as far as being like a real, like they achieve what they wanted to achieve in the first few years. Yeah, I mean, that's like some heavyweight underground stuff
Starting point is 00:29:41 right there that they got into their pages for sure. And yeah, I think the latest thing you mentioned was 1978 with Truman Capote and Andy Warhol. So this is all in like the first four years that they're cramming all this stuff in there. So yeah, right out of the gate, it was very successful. In part, Chuck, because there was nothing like this in existence before,
Starting point is 00:30:06 I mean, aside from some underground zines that 50 people read before high times, it became a national magazine, a national magazine about pot and people who love pot and love drugs and wanna see them legalized, and here's how you do it and here's how you grow this stuff.
Starting point is 00:30:21 And today it seems like it's not a really big thing to talk about pot or to find an article about people smoking pot in Newsweek or whatever. And that is because High Times existed and laid the groundwork for it. Yeah, I mean they by year four they had a subscribership that was about the same as Rolling Stone magazine. Yeah, that's crazy. Which is, yeah, it's just nuts. In 1978, Forsyte had previous attempts at suicide, but he succeeded in November of 1978, very sadly, when he was just 33 years old. I saw different things that he, you know, it was after the death of a friend that had him really upset, and like I said,
Starting point is 00:31:03 there were previous attempts. So he was a troubled guy to say the least, but they held his memorial atop the World Trade Center at the Windows of the World restaurant. And as legend has it, smoked, I think Keith Richards snorted his dad's ashes supposedly, but they rolled up some of Forsad's ashes in joints and smoked them as a staff.
Starting point is 00:31:28 That always reminds me of that episode from Six Feet Under where the daughter finds some actors who are snorting like their co-stars' ashes. I don't remember that one. She would eat on like cocaine or something like that and died and I can't remember the daughter's name from Six Feet Under, but she finds them doing this and just, Claire, she just goes bonkers on them.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Like, what is wrong with you? It's really good. It's very satisfying. It's weird for Claire to be judgy like that. She was so morally offended by what she was seeing that she just unleashed on them. It was weird for her, but it fit the moment. I wonder if she was upset about her art class at the time. I don't think she was there yet.
Starting point is 00:32:11 I think she was younger. Yeah. So High Times, this is before, as far as the magazine itself, before Forsythe died, they did start to sort of stray from their mission statement a little bit as far as coverage of harder drugs. They started writing a lot about cocaine, like in a big, big way.
Starting point is 00:32:32 They even started including cocaine and meth and LSD in that trans high market quotation as far as how much it should cost in different cities. And it was sort of like, I think the adherence of the magazine even were a little bit like, hey, this is not what I signed up for. Like this was a weed magazine. So they kind of got back to the weed thing more in the 80s, cocaine, you know, the reputation started to get a little bit more like, hey, wait a minute, this stuff is like really dangerous
Starting point is 00:33:01 and there's a lot of violence attached to it and in the trade. And so they really got back to the pot thing again in a big way. And they were just getting going again in the 80s back to their mission statement when the DEA launched something called Operation Green Merchant in which they really wanted to target marijuana growth and not the growth of marijuana, like growing marijuana plants, and advertisements for this equipment
Starting point is 00:33:30 that was sort of thinly veiled as like, oh no, these lights just help you grow your oregano at home or whatever, your lettuce. So Operation Green Merchant was to target those ads and the publications that sort of taught you step-by-step how to do this. Right, and so the DEA had tried to take down high times many times.
Starting point is 00:33:53 This is the one they almost got them with because it took out their advertisers. Their advertisers went to jail or were run out of business and all of a sudden a huge amount of High Times regular advertising dollars just vanished, like overnight because of Operation Green Merchant. And it went up in smoke, that's right. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:34:16 No, it was worth it for sure. And I read a quote there, they were saying like, at this point High Times was on the verge of bankruptcy. The DA almost got them, but they managed to just kind of slowly climb their way back and get back into it. In the 90s, this is when I started reading high times, it was saved by hip hop.
Starting point is 00:34:38 Because before Dr. Dre's The Chronic album came out, pot was just viewed as like, you know, people who listen to like hippies or burnouts, like Judas Priest fans, stuff like that. That's who smoked pot and they were just as likely to sniff glue at the same time, right? Right. Then The Chronic came along and it was,
Starting point is 00:35:01 it just exploded, like overnight. Pot was totally in fashion again and a whole new generation just got into it like really quickly. Yeah, and High Times Magazine, I mean they rolled right with it. I mean right into the 90s, all of a sudden it's like, oh, well now we can put Ice Cube on the cover
Starting point is 00:35:20 and write about this other sort of, I mean I guess you call it a subculture that we hadn't been highlighting in the past. And beyond making it relevant again, I think they found out they were missing out on an entire readership that they had never targeted before. Right, for sure. And one other impact that it had too, is they helped instruct people how to set up your home grow system.
Starting point is 00:35:49 So it was like hydroponic systems started kind of going from a thing you had to put together by going to 50 different stores, to like you can buy this entire hydroponic system through the pages of high times. They helped people learn how to do that along the way. And as a result, pot just started at the same time when it became fashionable again in the early 90s, it got exponentially better than it
Starting point is 00:36:16 had been leading up to that. It was like somebody threw a switch and all of a sudden pot was what you see or think of it now like just sticky buds and gorgeous like beautiful flowers and all that stuff. Like that really was much more potent. Like that happened at about the exact same time as like the chronic and Snoop Dogg coming out and all that like 92, 93 is when it really changed. I was talking to my friend, Clay, the other day, because he is who introduced us to the Chronic, when we would, I think I said this before,
Starting point is 00:36:51 but we went over to his house and played, like, the Nintendo, whatever the system was. What was the one back then? It was the... It wasn't the 64, was it? Super Nintendo? Yeah, the 64. Was it 64? Okay. Yeah, so we'd go over there and play Street Fighter and Mortal Kombat, and Clay one day was like, dude, listen to this.
Starting point is 00:37:07 Yeah. Puts on the chronic, and Snoop Dogg's voice came out of the speaker, and we were all into hip hop at the time, but Snoop Dogg, he didn't sound like anybody else at the time. No. So when his voice came out, we were like, who is this guy?
Starting point is 00:37:19 Yeah. It's like, oh my god, and like, how funny, and I was talking to him the other day, I was like, how funny back then, like would you ever think that now Snoop Dogg is like this, I mean, one of the most famous people in the world. I know, the mascot of USA Olympics. Yeah, I mean, working with Martha Stewart,
Starting point is 00:37:37 it's like, I don't think anybody saw that coming. Oh, that was a good documentary too, by the way. Oh, I haven't seen that one yet. It's good. Is it good? Mm-hmm. Hey, I don't know if everyone yet. It's good. Is it good? Mm-hmm. Hey, I don't know if everyone knows this. Jerry's been to Martha Stewart's house. I didn't know that.
Starting point is 00:37:50 Did I? Yeah, she told us a while ago. At one point, she was doing something with the company. I don't know if whatever happened with that. But Jerry went to her house. And she said it was a real mess. That's crazy. I believe it, though, it was probably like
Starting point is 00:38:06 felt scraps everywhere and half de-boned chicken and things like that just sitting around. Hodgepodge bottles just spilled all over the place. No, it was perfect. So, High Times, back to High Times. From 88 to 2013, there was an editor-in-chief named Steven Hager that ran the joint and he was, god man, I'm not even meaning to.
Starting point is 00:38:29 I swear I'm not. He ran High Times Magazine. This is when they, I mean they had always talked about legalization, but this is when they really, really got into writing and beating that drum about not decriminalizing but like legalizing weed for everybody. Yeah, like they moved that Overton window and made just the concept of legal weed, they took it from something like a dorm room conversation
Starting point is 00:38:59 to this is how you would do it, here's a path to legalization in the States. Yeah, yeah. this is how you would do it. Here's a path to legalization in the states, you know? And they just made it like a potential thing, like a real concept. They brought it into existence and helped push it along. I should say they covered the people who were out there like coming into or bringing it into existence or really thinking about it.
Starting point is 00:39:21 But through covering them and exposing them to millions of people every month, that kind of got the whole idea out there. Yeah, the normal NORML, that was it, right? Yeah, Thomas Forsad helped bankroll them in their early days. The National Organization for the Rethinking of Marijuana Legislation?
Starting point is 00:39:42 Reform of marijuana legislation. Realization? Reform? Yeah, reform. I went to one of the, the Atlanta Piedmont Park used to have in the nineties, the normal pot rally concerts. You went to that?
Starting point is 00:39:56 I went to one of them one year when the Black Crows played and it was a lot of fun. It was a great show. I liked them for a little while back then and it was really good. You were sitting amid a sea of brass bowls with was a great show. I liked them for a little while back then, and it was really good. You were sitting amid a sea of brass bowls with like the tie-dye little plastic middles
Starting point is 00:40:10 that you would hold onto. Yeah, well nobody was smoking weed. It was really weird. That's a little weird. That's so Atlanta. So yeah, they were advocating it such that there was an article in 2013 in The Nation that said, High Times Magazine
Starting point is 00:40:22 may be the most influential publication of our era. So it wasn't just, you know, cheeky articles and pictures of beautiful buds. It was like they were doing real work toward sea change and it worked. Yes, and yet at the same time, especially in like the magazine industry, they're just dismissed as, you know, they're just stoners. they're potheads, right? And they don't care, they don't seem to, they don't go after awards, they don't submit their,
Starting point is 00:40:52 their writers work for awards and stuff like that, they genuinely don't seem to care about that kind of stuff because they're off doing their own thing and they're actually doing it. But I saw a citation of how popular culture thinks of high times, they cited a Saturday Night Live skit featuring Jack Black, and he played High Times top reporter, and he was like, I think at a press conference or whatever, and he would stand up to ask a question and then he would forget what he was
Starting point is 00:41:19 gonna say every time. Yeah, of course. Oh, I thought it was hilarious. I didn't even see it. No, no, no, it's funny. I'm not saying it wasn't. I'm just saying like, yeah, that's gotta be the sketch is that he has no memory. Right, but I could not find it anywhere and I just read about it. Like all the other stuff I'm talking about.
Starting point is 00:41:39 I didn't experience it firsthand, I've just read about it. I feel like I saw it back then, but I do remember that one of the issues I had, and this had to be from the 2000s, was Tenacious D was on the cover. Yeah, and I think Jack Black himself was as well. Well, I mean, he is one half of Tenacious D. But I mean-
Starting point is 00:41:58 But you mean just without Kyle, he's like, let me do one without that guy. Yes. All right, we have been remiss in not taking a second break. So we're gonna do that now and we're gonna talk about what has happened over the last decade or 20 years or so right after this. Gosh and shut. Woo! Stuff you should know. The New Year is the perfect excuse to reset, refocus, and try something new, like drinking more mindfully
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Starting point is 00:45:19 is an iHeart Women's Sports Production in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment. Listen to Welcome to the Party. That's P-A-R-T-E-E on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. Presented by Capital One, founding partner of I Heart Women Sports. Okay, Chuck. So we were talking about how Stephen Heger guided high times through like a really prolific era. This is like in the 90s, I feel like and I don't maybe I'm just talking because that
Starting point is 00:45:59 was the time I came in contact with it. It feels like that's when it really transitioned into like an iconic thing that was never really gonna go away even if it went away. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, agreed. So in 2004, as I understand it, I believe Hager retired in 2003. And so the replacement they brought in
Starting point is 00:46:20 for editor in chief, as far as I know, I think we've both seen conflicting stuff, right? Yeah, I might've said 2013 too, which was, it was probably 2003. Oh, gotcha. Okay, so Richard Stratton came in as the editor in chief and he had bona fides. He served eight years in federal prison for dealing pot.
Starting point is 00:46:38 Oh, I thought you were gonna talk about editor in chief bona fides. Sorry. No, he didn't have those. That was the other thing. He was a journalist. get talking about editor-in-chief bonus few days. Sorry. No, he didn't have those. That was the other thing. He was a journalist. He'd reinvented himself as a journalist. I think he had some books under his belt.
Starting point is 00:46:53 He wasn't like a bad pick. He made a bad pick. He was very good friends with Norman Mailer. And in fact, one of the reasons he went to prison is he refused to implicate Norman Mailer in his pot-dealing activities. And when he became editor-in-chief of High Times, he hired Norman Mailer's son, John Buffalo Mailer,
Starting point is 00:47:13 who was 25 at the time. Hired him as executive editor. And, yeah, I like his name. John Buffalo Mailer had zero publishing experience whatsoever. And the whole thing, it was just, this is a bad time for high times. Yeah, it was ill-conceived. I think they didn't quite know where to go after the sort of, it's not like the hip-hop era ended any, you know, mention of weed or anything like that.
Starting point is 00:47:41 But it was sort of past that, You know, everything changes from decade to decade culturally and they didn't quite know what to do, I think. So they said, hey, why don't we do this? Why don't we try and sort of change the image of the magazine and become just more of a sort of a cultural magazine? Like, essentially, let's stop writing about weed exclusively, and let's really stop writing about weed almost altogether. And that lasted for about a year. They did not like that. The readership was like, what are you doing? The whole point of this magazine is that it's high times,
Starting point is 00:48:16 and it's not about freedom. It's about freedom to smoke weed specifically and grow it specifically. And like I said, about a year later, in fact, it was one year later, I think they were like, we really screwed up here. And so they went back in 2005 with a big cover that said the buds are back and 30 pages of pot picks on the inside. And everyone was like, oh, thank God. And it was one of their best selling issues of all time. Yeah, and they brought Steve Heger back in
Starting point is 00:48:47 to kind of right the ship again. Ah, okay. And he did. Like, this... High Times started the idea that we should legalize marijuana, worked at it ceaselessly for decades, and finally was still around
Starting point is 00:49:01 when that change started happening. Yeah. States started talking about actually legalizing pot, not decriminalizing, but legalizing pot, like you said, not just for medicinal purposes, but hey, if you're an adult and you want to smoke pot, go ahead and smoke pot. You're not going to get in trouble because we don't have any laws against it anymore. Like this was starting to happen, and High Times was right there, totally poised to just step up and accept its kudos
Starting point is 00:49:31 and its huge rise to prominence as this new changed culture around pot was about to just explode. And around this time, private equity got involved and everything went down the toilet. Yeah, I mean, that's the irony of this whole thing is right when they achieved all that is when they tanked because of what's called the Green Gold Rush.
Starting point is 00:49:54 Wall Street, of course, anytime they're like, oh, wait a minute, somebody's making money over there doing something? A lot of money? Well, how can we get involved? And that's exactly what happened. Investors started throwing money at every cannabis startup you could think of as states were rolling out legalization and making tons and tons of money.
Starting point is 00:50:13 And so they realized, hey, this High Times Magazine is just sitting there. It's a very recognizable brand. The magazine's okay, their website's all right, but they make like 80% of their dough from what's called the cannabis cup, which is, I think it started out as a smaller thing in Amsterdam, but then became like the official high times cannabis cup in the United States in 2010, which is a weed growing competition.
Starting point is 00:50:39 So like bring in your new strains of like exotic crossbreeds and like high potency buds. And you can win the cannabis cup and it's a big deal. It received a lot of coverage. They did concerts, they did festivals, they did trade shows. And it was a big moneymaker. So I think they were like, hey, we can invest in high times. We can open up a casino in Vegas maybe.
Starting point is 00:51:05 They bought up a dozen dispensaries and made them high time smoke shops. They talked about delivery services and they talked about an IPO for a while, which never happened. But all of this stuff, a lot of these big deals never came to fruition. And so they found themselves eventually $100 million in debt as these deals fell apart after going through just a string of CEOs, which is never, it's always a bad sign for a company, you know, when you have that kind of CEO turnover. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:36 And a lot of those dispensaries closed. And in the middle of the boom of the real marijuana industry, High Times was struggling and basically dead. Again, because private equity got involved. That's right. There's a really good Politico article called The Long Fall of High Times by Ben Schreckinger. Yeah. And it's really worth reading.
Starting point is 00:51:59 It's very long, but it's good. And that article puts the blame on Adam Levin, who ran OREVA Capital. He's the one who came in as the private equity guy and made all of these terrible decisions, did shady stuff like the announcements for some of these business ventures. They would announce them publicly and then the other company involved would have to come out publicly and be like, they haven't even approached us about this. What they just said is not true. So that's not a good thing to do.
Starting point is 00:52:31 That IPO was a big deal too because if you have investors, they want you to go public and then they can really start making money off the company. He just couldn't get it together to get the IPO out the door, yet that didn't keep them from selling pre-sale shares at $11 a piece to high times readers, promising them they were getting in on the bottom floor before the IPO even happened. Just shady stuff. And so this lasted for just a couple of years
Starting point is 00:52:59 before the magazine, the whole brand, went into receivership, meaning that there was a corner-appointed person who was in charge of their assets who would try to figure out how to help them get out of bankruptcy or how to help them get out of a hole without going into bankruptcy, while at the same time paying off their creditors. And I guess it didn't really work because in,
Starting point is 00:53:20 I guess, May of last year, the receiver said, hey, we're gonna have a fire sale. Everybody step up, get out your checkbooks, let's do this thing. Yeah, seven million bucks, we'll get you the magazine, the cannabis cup, the dispensaries that we still have open. Nobody came forward, which is shocking.
Starting point is 00:53:42 I think the most shocking thing to me, and I'm gonna say this publicly, I'm gonna call out publicly even, why hasn't Snoop Dogg and freaking Martha Stewart, they would miss seven million dollars, they wouldn't even know it's gone. Why have they not bought this brand? Because that sort of public like purchase with those two names, or even if it's just a Snoop Dogg, but Martha Stewart would add a funny sort of cachet to it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:07 Like, it would all of a sudden be a relevant thing again, and I don't know, it's just, it's shocking that nobody came forward to buy it. I hope that that ends up being like your Sharknado thing, or like the Jared from Subway thing, or like your Hugh Jackman greatest showman thing. I hope that comes true thanks to you. Oh, maybe somebody who knows Snoop hears this and they're like, hey Snoop,
Starting point is 00:54:28 he may not even know it's for sale, you know? It's possible. He's been on the cover a bunch, but he might not be paying attention, you know? Yeah, they could say, Snoop, high time this is for sale. You should buy it. And he would say, for schnizzle. Right.
Starting point is 00:54:43 So I read a great quote from Pot Culture magazine. So High Times just stopped. They put out their last published issue in 2024 and the fact that they were still putting out a print magazine actually says how strong the brand was at one point because they went right through that time where magazines were just folding, print anything was just folding left and right. And yet they still had the print magazine. And they had a pretty heavyweight website too,
Starting point is 00:55:15 Hightimes.com. They had their whole archive, all the magazines on it. And yet the website hasn't been updated since June 2024. The last issue was September, 2024. If you go onto the site, none of the images work. They're all grayed out rectangles. So sad. Very disappointing.
Starting point is 00:55:33 And Pot Culture Magazine put it that the once mighty high times.com is gone, reduced to an error message that is reminiscent of finding your favorite uncle dead on the floor. I saw that quote. I don't think anybody could have put it better than that. Yeah, for sure. I also just realized with the ultimate 50 something year old white guy, I think it would probably be for shizzle and not for schnizzle.
Starting point is 00:55:59 Cause for sure would be for shizzle, right? Sure, it would be for sure. But I think that the things have evolved so much that you're fine. Okay. Okay. Good. So yeah, Snoop, Martha, please do by high times
Starting point is 00:56:14 because it's such an ignominious end. Is that the right word? Or was I just deletrious to my own vocabulary? Ignominious, ignominious? Ignoramus, I think, is what you meant. No. Such a unclassy end. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:30 It's just like that magazine deserves better than that. Yeah. Jack Black, he's not going to miss $7 million. Maybe. Maybe. I mean, he might miss it for the afternoon. But then he would say, but I've got this magazine now. No, I'm with you.
Starting point is 00:56:43 I think Martha Stewart has that much laying under in piles under her hodgepodge bottles that we were talking about, you know? Yeah, you're probably right. Okay, well that's it about high times. If you wanna know more about it, there's tons of tribute articles all over the web to read that are kind of fun.
Starting point is 00:57:00 And while you're doing that, it's time for listener mail. Yeah, this is from Rosalie, and it's just a very kind, sort of gentle reminder, which is always nice to hear. Hey guys, it's taken me a while to get this into words, and I hope it comes across with care. It does. But why do you suck so much? Yeah, exactly. As a woman in science who does science every day, I just want to point out that technicians
Starting point is 00:57:25 are still scientists. In your episode on chemistry sets, you rightly pointed out all the sexism in the past and present and how science is presented to girls versus boys. But you also feed into it a little bit when you said that girls were funneled into technician jobs instead of being the scientists.
Starting point is 00:57:40 There are a lot of ways to be a scientist and technician is definitely one of them. That's like saying that nurses aren't healers like doctors are. A more accurate description is that women were and are funneled into technician and now communication jobs in the sciences and men to the professors and principal investigators. It is better than it has ever been, I have to say, but academia still hasn't figured it out, among other things. And that, I'm glad to know that, that Rosalie and that's from Rosalie Malte
Starting point is 00:58:07 That was a great reminder We'd love love love being reminded or when it's pointed out to us that yes We fed into something that we were just totally unaware of especially if it's unjust, you know Yeah, technicians are scientists. Of course they are. That's right. That should be a t-shirt Maybe it will be well, thanks a lot, Rosalie. We appreciate that big time. If you want to be like Rosalie and send us an email like that, you can send it off to stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
Starting point is 00:58:36 Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeart Radio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. The new year is the perfect excuse to reset, refocus, and try something new, like drinking more mindfully with Seedlip non-alcoholic spirits. Seedlip is a non-alcoholic spirit carefully crafted from a unique blend of botanicals and spices made to be mixed in your favorite non-alcoholic spirit carefully crafted from a unique blend of botanicals and spices made to be mixed in your favorite non-alcoholic cocktails. Ask your local bartender to shake up a Seedlip cocktail for you or craft your own at home. Kick off 2025 right by visiting Seedlipdrinks.com
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