Host of WeedBudz Radio, Ry Russell and members of his team and family have worked incredibly hard to open the very first Adult-Use Cannabis store in the Katahdin Region of Northern Maine. This is a recreational marijuana store meaning that any individual over the age of 21 is permitted with valid form of identification. There is no medical card required to shop at an adult-use store. The team states that they are eager to expand their offerings and work with a large number of Maine Craft Cultivators and Processors in order to deliver the very best products available. Stores like this take a lot of pride in the testing that is required of each and every product that takes up shelf space, ensuring only the best quality products are served to their community. The store is located at 1995 Medway Rd, Medway, Maine; immediately off of I95 for quick and easy access to and from the highway. This store is NOW open 7 Days a Week from 10am to 7pm. Visit their website https://budzemporium.com/ for specials and menus and information. You can reach the BUDZ by calling or texting 207-723-1634 with any questions or at BudzEmporium@gmail.com.
Affinity Patient Advocacy and Mental Health Awareness!

Hello Everyone!
We wanted to give a shoutout to our friends Affinity Patient Advocacy for launching a new line of candles for Mental Health Awareness! Below you can find their mission statement as well as their website:
“Our Mission:
Affinity Patient Advocacy’s mission is simple. We strive to serve patients in their most important time of need. With that said, Affinity Patient Advocacy will become an invaluable resource to our clients. Patients who have been diagnosed with serious illnesses that require a treatment plan will receive comfort of mind in knowing that they have an advocate who will endeavor to remove the medical complexities and allow their family to focus all of their energies on treatments and recovery.”
Learn how to help and support more at http://www.affinitypatientadvocacy.org
Each candle is $30.00 and 100% of proceeds from the sale of each candle goes towards assisting patients with:
•Mindfulness meditation coaching
•Grief coaching
•Kickstarting the medical marijuana card application process
•Helping cannabis patients along their new medical cannabis journey
•Clinical trial recommendations
•Legal cannabis patient advisory
•Receiving preferred pricing for Dr. Endorsed CBD products
•And so much more!
You can also help support the organization by signing up for Amazon Smile using the link https://smile.amazon.com/ch/47-5500348
If interested, please email info@affinitypatientadvocacy.org

Who is someone you’re grateful for that has made an extraordinary impact in the medical cannabis community?
On November 10, 2021, Affinity Patient Advocacy is hosting the Change Influencers in Medical Cannabis Livestream Event, created to celebrate those making a significantly
positive impact on the medical cannabis community.
After the passing of Affinity Patient Advocacy’s Founder’s father, Albert J. DiArcangelo Sr., due to cancer, Christina DiArcangelo felt it was only right to congratulate and honor those whose work in the medical cannabis community provides relief, hope, and
healing.
If you’d like to contribute, make a donation, or choose a sponsorship, please email info@affinitypatientadvocacy.org or click here: https://www.affinitypatientadvocacy.org/events
Keeping up with Compliance w/ Dede Perkins
Hello All!
We would like to welcome you to another informative episode of WeedBudz Radio, with your host Ry Russell. As many of us know, this is still a new industry. Sure cannabis has been around for a long time but just recently we have had to keep up with more laws, regulations, etc. With this positive change in the industry, compliance is more important than ever. Who better to discuss this ever changing industry than Dede Perkins, CEO & Co-Founder of ProCanna. ProCanna is a software that breaks down the rules and regulations of each state when it comes to opening a dispensary, grow operation, and really any other business in the world of cannabis. Join us and learn how ProCanna is helping entrepreneurs nationwide and find out how you can stay up to date on the ever changing world of compliance. Tune in!
Guest:
Dede Perkins
ProCanna
Host:
Ry Russell
WeedBudz Radio
Manufactured Excellence
Knot Plastic
Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/ryzabove)
Contact the host or our team using the form below.

Transcript:
Hey, everyone.
Welcome back to another episode of WeedBudz Radio.
Of course. I’m your host. Ry Russell.
I’m always so excited to learn about
compliance because whether you are farming, you’re
in cultivation, retail, manufacturing factoring, you have
got to be compliant in this industry.
Can be so hard to digest the laws and regulations.
And so sometimes we need to ask
the professionals to come in and help.
And that’s what we did today.
Dede Perkins, thank you so much for joining me.
Thank you, Ry .
I’m happy to be here.
Before we jump in talking about compliance in the
crazy world thereof, I am always fascinated about the
careers that the entrepreneurs and the professionals had before
getting into the cannabis space, because there really is
no normal journey into cannabis.
Can you tell me a little bit about yours? Certainly.
I was a freelance writer working for myself, and one of
my clients gave me a referral to a gentleman, and all
she knew was he needed help with an application.
And so I went in and met him.
We talked on the phone quickly.
And I walk in, there’s this nice guy
sitting at this conference table, and he puts
his hands up and he says, after we said hello.
I don’t know if you
know anything about medical marijuana.
I’m not a stoner, but I
really need help on this application.
And I knew nothing about medical
marijuana at the time, absolutely nothing.
And I liked, the guy and just kept listening.
And before I knew it, we were working on
one of the first competitive applications in Mass.
We won that license.
I met a lot of people at the
national level and just started getting other work.
And literally within like 18 months, I
was totally, my practice had flipped and
I was basically working exclusively in the
cannabis industry, which I found incredibly compelling.
And it was like 2013, so it was pretty early on.
It was just really great to
be in the industry that early.
I love that.
It’s funny because I’ve been working on adult use
retail application and I know other individuals, and it
does seem like you almost need a writer on
staff to fill out one of these applications.
So could you have ever imagined
that you’d go from freelance writing?
What type of writing?
Was it creative writing?
No, I did business stuff, so I
mean, some technical, a lot of marketing
copy and sort of a serial entrepreneur.
So before that, I had had a kid’s clothing
company for 8 years, so I knew about retail.
But yeah, I ended up sort
of becoming a regulatory specialist site.
For whatever reason.
I like the regs, and that was one of my
jobs on many of the applications, was to make sure
everything was covered and we hadn’t missed anything.
And just to be the organized, also to write
it, but to make sure that everything was covered.
You do that over and over
again in lots of different states. It’s basically a book.
Now, how many states have you written applications in?
Oh, gosh, I don’t know.
10, 11, 12 maybe. Wow.
Is there a lot of variance from state
to state, or are they pretty similar?
The applications themselves, in the
beginning especially, were vastly different.
Maryland had this really small character count.
Actually, Massachusetts did in the first one too.
Others were open ended.
One of our applications that we submitted for a
client was 900 pages because they wanted everything.
And so you want to win, right?
So you put it all in there.
But the regulations, we saw a lot of consistency.
In fact, sometimes you’d think, okay, and I
can’t remember which state it was, but X state, okay,
they took this from literally, the language would
be the exact same from another state application.
So you know that they were all talking
and grabbing pieces of each other’s applications.
What worked.
I would think that as we continue to grow as
an industry, I would like to think anyway that there
will be a little bit more uniformness to the applications.
Because I’ve heard the same thing that in Nevada and
California it could be up to 900 pages, where in
Maine it might only be 100 or 200.
So I’m thinking that as regulators get
together, we might see a little bit
more uniformity amongst the applications.
But I’m curious, what are some ways
that you recommend people in terms of
tackling an application, be it retail, farming,
agriculture, just any of these applications?
Because there’s so many licenses.
It’s not like there’s just one license.
You get a handful.
How do you recommend people tackle it?
Well, I mean, the first thing you have to do
is you have to read the regulation of the statute
that explains what the application looks like long before the
application is actually released, and just prepare.
Honestly, you have to put a team together.
I’ve never seen one person write an application, at
least in the bigger states by themselves, there’s so
many different requirements, from safety and security to extraction
and depending on what kind of license.
So I think just sort of realizing the application itself
is a big project and manage that project and get
the resources you need and plan ahead, because if you
wait until the state releases the application, you probably don’t
have enough time to complete it.
Now, let’s say somebody is interested because compliance
does not stop at the application process.
Compliance is ongoing for as long
as you are in the business.
So what tools do you have or that
you have found make it easier for people
to remain compliant after the application process?
Well, it’s tricky.
And I think everybody well, from my experience,
each company does it a little differently.
What we did at Procanna is I kept seeing, when
you get a license, you think, okay, I’ve won. Right?
That’s the big part.
But then you got to build your facilities.
You have to train your staff,
hire your staff, train your staff.
And you have to comply within
many states, everything that you promised in
the application plus the state regulations.
In some cases in California especially, there’s local
regulations that you have to comply with.
And it’s just like this suit of regulations.
And then if you have a vertical operation,
you’ve got a cultivation team that has one
group of regulations processing a retail, totally separate.
The teams are totally separate.
The leadership is totally separate.
And if you’re in multiple states, it just
gets to be a very complex formula.
And on top of that, they change them and they enact
legislation that fine tunes the regs on a regular basis.
So staying on top of that is tricky.
And I just kept thinking I saw a
lot of stress in the cannabis industry.
Small companies, big companies around us, everybody
was sort of they get the license,
they jump in, everything’s great.
And then the systems just weren’t
set up properly, I think, honestly.
Or there weren’t systems to be set up.
And now that the industry is getting
a little bit more mature, I think
compliance will become much more important.
They’ve learned how to operate.
They’ve got their policies and procedures in place.
Even if you’re a new applicant, the industry is ensuring
that you realize compliance is part of the answer.
So ProCanna basically is a hub.
We take the state regulations, we
slice them and dice them.
They’re all searchable.
We build policies and procedures and
audit off of the regulations.
So you sort of think of it as table stakes.
Like, these are the foundation, like the bumper.
You stay within these guides, these bumpers, you can
do anything you want in the middle, right?
And that’s where the internal policies come in.
And procedures, our tools start with policies
and procedures, right, through training and quizzing
and audit, collecting business intelligence and then
reporting it out to stakeholders.
So it’s just a tool set, but it keeps everybody
in there and it’s sort of a likable interface that
makes compliance just a little less stressful, I think.
I think anything to reduce stress is great.
I’m curious in terms of compliance, what’s at stake?
For somebody that’s gone through and invested the amount
of money that it takes to start any business,
but especially in this space, what’s at stake if
you’re not operationally excellent, ongoing?
Well, there’s a lot at stake.
There’s compliance with the external regulations, the state
and the local municipalities, and then there’s compliance
with your internal policies and procedures.
And they both, in not being
in compliance has effects for both.
But let’s just deal with the regulatory.
I mean, the most obvious is
fines. Fines and license suspension.
In Massachusetts, a medium sized company got a
$350,000 fine for using the wrong pesticide.
And sometimes that’s a lot for a company. For any company,
but especially a small to midsized company.
So there’s that.
There’s fines, deficiencies and license
suspensions and all that.
But I think there’s also a company culture.
If the people in the company don’t know
exactly what the rules are, if they don’t
know what’s expected of them, it’s just stress
goes up or sometimes it’s just ignorance.
They don’t even know that they’re not in compliance.
And so from the owner operator
point of view, that’s very stressful.
There’s a lot of implications
of not being in compliance. Absolutely.
I’m also curious, so you have your service of
helping guide individuals, but you also have a platform.
And I would love for you to try to break down the
software as well because I know that you mentioned training
and all of that, but how easy is it?
Because for somebody like me, I’m
not tech savvy at all.
So how would I fully utilize your platform?
Yes, so having a sort of a friendly and
intuitive user experience was right at the top of
our list as we were developing it.
So it is literally one of
our first clients who signed on.
I signed him on a Friday, I called him on Monday
and he’s like, oh my God, I did a 30 step
audit over the weekend and I’m in the facility.
We’ll definitely provide training, but it’s
a pretty easy intuitive process.
You start with the policies and the procedures.
You can drag and drop your own in.
Again, the tools are pretty easy.
It’s all searchable.
You can assign a regulation block
a policy or procedure for training.
You can add videos if you have a trimmer who
does this is the best trimmer in our staff.
You can take a little short, 2 or 3
minute video, connect it to a standard operating procedure,
assign them both for training, create audits.
So it’s just an intuitive platform that it starts
with the regulations, policy, training, audit, right to reporting,
and each of the sections is pretty manageable.
And all the tools that we use to build
out the content is available to the user.
So you use the same tools we
do to build out the content.
That’s amazing.
What advice do you have?
And I know being compliant, being operationally excellent is something
that I saw going through your website as very important
things, but what advice do you have for those of
us that are like right on the cusp of getting
into the industry, but we’re so overwhelmed?
What do you have for those individuals?
Well, cannabis industry can be overwhelming, but I think if
you’re writing your application, one thing that we have is
all the regulations in your state for your facility type
are all searchable and sliced and dice.
We’ve got sort of those foundational
policies and procedures that you can
literally they’re right there for you.
You can build on top of them,
you can bring in your own.
But ultimately, at the most basic level, we’ve
done that first layer of work for you.
So I think a number of people in our
platform have consultants working in ProCanna with them.
So an attorney or an app
writer or a cultivation consultant.
So they’re working in the system together to either write
the application or to set up the systems that will
allow them to be profitable and have a great company.
Now, did you ever think that you would be in
software when you first got into the cannabis space?
Number 1, I didn’t think I’d ever be in cannabis.
Number 2, I never thought I’d be
in software, and here I am. It’s very cool.
I’m quite happy.
Tell me about some of the challenges
because I know nothing about software.
So tell me about some of the challenges
you had to overcome building your platform.
The first one was actually just finding the right team.
I mean, we had vetted and talked to
a number of people, number of companies that came
highly recommended, and it was 2019
I think we were about ready to sign a contract
with a really well regarded company based in Portland, Maine.
We’re a Maine based company, and it
just didn’t feel right in the process.
I felt like something’s not right here.
And at the last, we didn’t sign the
contract, and there’s just something not right.
And lo and behold, literally like 3 weeks
later, there was an announcement in the paper
that they were moving their US.
Operations to Warsaw.
And I think that was
coming through in their communications.
They wanted the work, but they didn’t really want
to tell us they were leaving the state.
And we ended up starting over.
So it actually put us back a couple
of months because it’s a big investment.
Choosing. It’s got to be the right fit.
And we started from scratch, and we found
a team that now feels like family.
They’re out of New Hampshire, but they have a big
team, and they are just so smart and so responsive.
And I have a vision, and they created,
and it’s just a really great collaboration, and
I can’t say nothing but great about them.
Everything comes down to having a good
team at the end of the day.
Certainly does. And systems.
You need systems, but you need a good team. Yes.
So speaking of team and systems, I’m
really curious because employee training is something
that we’re talking a lot about.
How do we create the right system for onboarding?
How do we create the
right system for continuing education?
So is this platform something that could be utilized to
effectively keep our teams up to date and train?
Most definitely.
And I feel like the training
is the heart of the system. Right?
It’s all about the employees. Right?
So the regulations, none of that matters unless the people
understand it and understand how to do their job.
Amazing.
I love it because it is. I know.
Like I mentioned, we’re working on an adult
use application here in the state of Maine,
and I’m so overwhelmed reading through I think
I’ve read through the regulations 10, 15 times already.
And what I loved about your website is it looks like
I’m able to break it down into bite size and manageable
pieces and action items and then divide that out over the team.
Exactly. Definitely.
And to get back to your training, I
just wanted to add one more comment.
A lot of the states sort of require responsible
vendor training, like a licensed third party training company.
So obviously we are not that.
I just want to be clear that we are not that.
So we sort of work and we complement
the responsible vendor trainers or whatever they’re called
in the different states because Procanna allows you
to train your team on your individual, your
internal policies and procedures.
So it’s not so much the big picture, but it’s literally
you can get drilled down into, like I said before, how
to trim the flower or how are you going to package.
And that’s sort of in that
continuing training education bucket, too.
So if you have to have another 12 hours, every
employee has to have 12 hours of continuing education.
It doesn’t all have to be external to your company.
So internally you could be assigning, reassigning the way to
do their work and it changes in the regulations.
So that can all be built into ProCanna.
Amazing, because I know for us, for example, and
for so many tuning in, they might have one
of these kind of third party trainers that will
come in and train their bud tenders.
But I also have some things that I think
are important, maybe in the sales training side.
Now, can I make a video of myself and
another employee and then upload that as a training?
Most certainly.
In fact, yeah, we didn’t even talk about
like the forward facing piece, but absolutely.
And that’s all brand right?
The way people interact with your company,
the way your people interact with customers.
Yes, you can definitely do that.
Well, let’s talk about that forward facing piece because
I know I saw strong, culture, empowered employees.
I know that this is something
that you care about a lot. I do.
I feel like if people understand
what’s expected of them, they relax.
And when people relax, they’re more productive, they
feel good, they know how to evaluate success. Right?
When people are well trained and everybody is on
it’s like they’re all pulling in the same direction. Right?
You get better results.
And teams that get good results tend to be
more resilient and more psyched about being at work. Right?
So I think that all directly affects process.
Brand loyalty.
How does your team interact with your customers?
It affects everything, I think.
Tell me a little bit.
Even future stakeholders or partners potentially.
Like if you’re a wholesaler and you’ve got this
great team and they’re consistent, your product is consistent,
that’s going to affect your supply chain.
People that want to buy from you people
that are going to work with you.
So it’s not just with customers, but it’s
also with other partners in the industry and
potential investors, all that kind of stuff.
I’m sure investors look at that very strongly.
I’m curious about the power of strong branding and brand
development because I’ve heard a few times now and it’s
not something I believe in, but I’ve heard a few
people while we’re in marijuana, we open the doors, people
are going to come and buy and I just feel
like that’s not necessarily the case.
Branding is important in just about any business and I
would think it is in this business as well.
I totally agree with you and I think in
the early days when it was new, probably anybody
who opened the store like said, people would come.
But as the industry and the consumers
become more sophisticated, as the competition increases
right, you’re talking about Maine.
There’s potentially a lot of licenses in Maine, a
lot of retail stores, and people are going to
support the brands that they trust and they like,
I mean, like comes into it.
Like they want to like the people
that they’re going in and talk to.
So I think that that bar is
quickly being raised honestly. I love that.
Well, Dede, I’m so grateful that you were joining
me today to talk about these things because we
don’t get to talk about compliance a lot.
We deal with it an awful lot.
We don’t get to talk about it an awful lot.
And so for those out there that know
they need some assistance either breaking things down
in terms of the compliance, the regulatory getting
started, or ongoing training and brand development, what
is the best way for them to check
out the platform or connect with you further?
Yes, I think our website does a good
job of explaining what we do that’s procanna-usa.com.
I’m on LinkedIn.
I’m happy to connect with people, answer
questions, have conversations with basically anybody.
It’s a cool industry and happy to connect. Amazing.
Well, thank you so much Dede.
I really appreciate the time. Thank you.
It’s been a great conversation. And I’m so grateful to all
of you for tuning into this episode of WeedBudz Radio.
Be sure to check out our show notes.
We will include links so you
can connect with Dede on LinkedIn.
Also check out the website and
of course you can find that at weedbudzradio.com.
Thank you so much.
We’ll see you in the next episode.
Starting to Break the Stigma w/ The Noobie & The Doobie
Hello Friends!
Welcome to another very interesting episode of WeedBudz Radio, with your host Ry Russell. This episode is a pretty cool one and it is a little different from what we do, not only are we interviewing two guests at once but we also have a non-cannabis user who is pro-cannabis! Let me introduce Timmy Boyle & Marijane Baker, otherwise known as The Noobie and The Doobie! Marijane is a cannabis model who is all an avid cannabis user, and Timmy was a youth pastor, he is a clean comedian and has had one or two puffs max. The best part? They are dating each other! Join us and find out how this dynamic works, what they have learned on their journey through cannabis, and listen to them advise others on each side of the debate.
Tune in!
Guests:
Marijane Baker & Timmy Boyle
The Noobie & The Doobie
Host:
Ry Russell
WeedBudz Radio
Manufactured Excellence
Knot Plastic
Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/ryzabove)
Contact the host or our team using the form below.

Transcript:
Hey, friends.
Welcome back to another episode of WeedBudz Radio.
I’m really excited for this episode because it’s
not every day that we get to have
other podcast hosts on the show.
And I’m really excited to have Mary Jane
Baker and Timmy Boyle join us today.
Both of you, thank you so much for coming.
Oh Ry, no problem.
We had nothing planned for the next 3
weeks, so this builds up our schedule nicely. Amazing.
Well, I have to say, Timmy, I’m really interested in
your background, because I grew up with two Episcopal ministers
for grandparents, and when I had to come out of
the cannabis closet, it was a big kind of production.
I took all of my grandparents out to breakfast, and
I had a conversation of, I started this little show.
It’s starting to get some attention, and before it
gets any more, I need to come clean.
And it was hilarious because they
both had embraced it so much.
My grandmother was using the products.
My grandfather was using products for
his cancer treatments, and it turned
into quite a beautiful conversation.
I’m curious, would you mind sharing a little bit of
your origin story of where you came from and what
brought you into this journey into podcasting about cannabis?
Sure. Yeah.
Can I just throw back one initial question to you?
So you didn’t know they were
using secretly, is that right?
So I had known that my grandmother was using
CBD, but I had no idea that either one
of them were using any sort of THC products. Right.
Well, I can tell you it’s something that
I’ve realized over the last few years.
I grew up in, I would say a fairly
conservative Baptist church, like, literally born in a pew.
My mom denies that, but I think it’s just
because it’s an awkward way to give birth.
But I was there in the same church for 30 years.
I was the golden child.
No smoking, no drinking, no sex before marriage.
I did a little dancing, a little roller skating,
but I did that on the down low.
And certainly weed was or the devil’s lettuce
is the way that it was referred to.
Not only was it linked in with every other drug, like,
you just don’t go there, but it wasn’t even brought up.
It’s not like we even talked about, hey, here’s why
you shouldn’t use it, or here’s what it’s about.
So it was as far away from my mind.
I didn’t know anybody who used it.
We didn’t talk about it.
It wasn’t anywhere there.
But as I’ve gotten older and as I
look back, I think, what your experience
I’m finding there are so many users, especially older
generation, where it was even more, especially in the
church where it was back in those days, it
was show up in a suit and tie.
You had your church reality in your
home reality, just out of cultural necessity.
And I’m finding there’s way more people that were
probably using it secretly while I was growing up,
thinking that it was a no, no, no, but because no
one talked about it, everybody just kept it hidden.
And I think that’s an incredible shame.
So I’m coming into this world completely and
utterly blind, and I wouldn’t be here right
now, I don’t think, without meeting Mary Jane.
Mary Jane opened up that
door, but very conservative routes.
Ideas were breaking down before I met Mary Jane,
and Mary Jane just kind of put another big
kick in there and opened my eyes through some
misinformation and non information that I had had. Sure.
Now, Mary Jane, same question.
What was your first experience?
What was your origin story with cannabis?
Okay, so that goes back many years.
I don’t want to say how many
because I don’t want to age myself.
However, I was a teenager and somebody had said,
do you want to come smoke a joint?
And I was like, that’s bad.
That’s weed. That’s marijuana.
I’m not going to do that.
And I actually went home and I had a
discussion with my dad because we were very open,
very honest, and I knew he consumed from when
I was younger because in school they teach you,
like, Timmy’s saying cannabis is lumped in with cocaine
and heroin and all the other nasty drugs.
So when I found out that my dad was using
at a young age, I was very angry with him.
How could he do something that was so
bad that could get him thrown in jail?
And when he explained it to me that it was
like alcohol, I kind of had a different perception.
I was like, okay, if people can drink
and still function, then it would be okay.
So he lived by the it’s not what you do, it’s
what you do when you do what you do method.
So when I went to him as a teenager
and we had the discussion about cannabis, he said,
I’ll tell you what, you want to try it?
We’ll try it together in a safe
environment so you know what you’re getting.
You don’t have to get it from
who knows where or god knows what.
And that was my door into cannabis.
Which is funny because when my mum found out
that I had smoked with my dad, she got
mad, told me, Get in the car.
I was like, oh, my God, what’s going on?
Where are we going?
She drives down a dirt road, pulls over, says, pass
me the pack of smokes from under the seat.
And I’m like, shaking. I have no idea.
I’m like, 16 years old, no idea what’s going on.
Reach under the seat, pass her the pack of cigarettes.
She says the bag too.
So I reached under the seat and
I pulled out a bag of weed.
And the look on my face as I looked
at my mum, who had flipped over the pack
of smokes to reveal it was a pipe.
She made a pipe out of a pack of smokes.
She was like, well, give it to me.
And I was like, so it was the realization
that everybody that I know might just actually be
consuming cannabis, and I might not know it, and
my dad was like, doctors, lawyers, teachers, they do
it, but they can’t say that they do it.
So I was always confused as to how something that made
me feel so good could be illegal and be wrong. Sure.
So that was my entrance.
We’ll say into cannabis was. Amazing.
It was guided. Well, that’s, I think, a
really powerful way to be introduced to cannabis.
I was sharing a little while back, my first experience.
I was lucky to have such good friends
around me because I was listening to my
heartbeat, and it was just surreal.
It was not something that I grew up with either,
and being surrounded by the right people, and I think
making you feel safe makes all of the difference.
I’m curious, Timmy, growing up in the background that you
did with the church, do you consume cannabis today?
No, I don’t, actually, which surprises a lot of people.
Not only are we doing the podcast the Newbie
and the Doobie together, because me still remaining the
newbie, which actually, strictly from business standpoint, if I
ever started to consume, there goes our name.
What’s the point of the Newbie and the Doobie?
I have to try something new. Even if I wanted to try.
Now we’re locked into this long term,
so I can’t lose the designation.
We got to change and hold our name and
branding, and that’s just too much money and effort.
He did try it, though. I did try it.
So I got into this phase of life where
I was like, I want to try new things.
I had broken free from a lot of the stigmas that
have been set up through a deeply religious growing up.
And like I said, a lot of
those stigmas and misinformation and non information.
I don’t even think most of it was
this intentional thing of, like, don’t.
It was so not in the thing.
It was just non existence.
And so I don’t blame anybody necessarily for that.
But I realized that there were these thought processes
in my head, some of it pop culture driven.
There’s a very, very clear perception of what a
stoner is and what we would do to somebody.
Pop culture has probably done a disservice
to the cannabis consuming world based on
how those who don’t smoke perceive it.
But I was willing to try new things.
I’d come into a new stage of life, and it
was right beforeI kind of met Mary Jane.
When she heard that I had never, ever consumed
cannabis, I believe her words were, enter Mary Jane.
She couldn’t believe it.
She jumped right in.
So she set me up with my very first smoking joint
experience, which I was severely disappointed at because I had seen
all the movies and stuff, and I felt nothing.
And I was like, well, why am
I trying something that gives me nothing?
So it was a downer for me.
And so she said, well, that’s okay.
I gave you a really low dose.
So she gave me a second one.
We went on a bowling date, and she upped my THC.
This is stuff I’m learning in hindsight.
This is what she did.
She upped my THC.
And I’m a good bowler, like 300
bowler a few times and 5 pins.
I take my bowling game serious,
and my bowling game dramatically fell.
And I realized right then and there it’s
like, look, some things aren’t worth risking.
So I was already on my way out
of the cannabis smoking world at that point.
I’m like, I can’t have my bowling game drop.
And so I always try things in 3’s.
3 is an important number to me.
I always feel that you need to watch a TV
show 3 episodes in, listen to a podcast 3 episodes
in, trying to get a feel for what’s going on.
So I tried it a third time.
We were sitting down at her house,
and whatever she gave me made me
blank out multiple times through our conversation.
It was about 25, 26% THC, which apparently now
I found out is incredibly high for especially a
newbie and being a cerebral person and somebody who
grew up not just religiously, but just in my
own life, always wanting to be a sound mind.
I was very intellectually cerebral based, and the
fact that I couldn’t keep track of this
conversation freaked me out, and I didn’t like
the feeling of being disconnected like that.
And so that was my last time.
So it was 3 times over a span of, I
don’t know, a couple of weeks or whatever, and then
I handed it all over and said, I’ve been there,
done that, but I’d still like to talk about it.
So I just want to add the time that we went
bowling, he said it was the second time that he consumed,
which is true, but because he felt nothing the first time,
he smoked two joints in a row before going bowling, which
is probably why he felt the way he did.
And when you smoked the 25, 26% THC, I put on
a movie, which is the appropriate thing to do when you
smoke that high THC and just chill and watch the movie.
But of course, me being me, I started doing this.
And you can’t talk to somebody who’s
that high when all they want.
They need to just chill and relax.
So I kind of set him up
for a poor experience on that one.
Well, Mary Jane, I know that you have
much more experience with cannabis than Timmy does.
How does cannabis play a role in your life today.
Okay.
I would say cannabis is what gets me through every day.
I’ve learned to use it instead of letting it use
me, because there are times when I just want to
smoke a joint for the sake of smoking a joint,
but then there are other times that I need to
smoke a joint because of my anxiety levels or whatnot.
So, yeah, cannabis is pretty much in anything and
everything that I do, whether I’m eating it or,
you know, I like to make bath salts and
infuse my bath salts, and I’ve even painted with
it and like cannabis oil. Painted with cannabis? Yes.
So I do a type of painting that’s called paint pouring.
It’s where you take the paint and put it in
a cup and basically just, like, dump it all over
a canvas and it does this amazing stuff.
But you can add a little bit of cannabis oil, the
MCT oil, into the actual paint and mix it up, and
it’ll give you these nice cells, nice big globs.
It’s beautiful.
That’s really cool.
I can’t wait to see an image of that. That’s good.
I should probably have one around here somewhere.
Well, I’m curious.
What is it like for both of you?
I feel like talking to different
couples all of the time.
Either neither one smokes or consumes in
any way or both of them consume.
What is it like being a newbie and a doobie?
How does that work?
So I foolishly thought that when we met, I
was like, oh, this is going to be fun.
I’m going to introduce him to
cannabis, and Bob’s your uncle.
I’m going to have a cannabis consuming partner.
I don’t even know of Bob.
He’s your uncle. Lo and behold,
I mean, he doesn’t consume, which I’m not really
complaining about because it just means there’s more for
me and I don’t have to share.
I’m like a cannabis smokers dream, right?
It’s like, wait, I don’t have
to share anything with you.
I’ve always got a driver. Right.
Take me anywhere I want to go.
Pizza, 1 in the morning? No.
Well, is it hard at all?
Are there any challenges?
Because I know, like, some couples, they
hate the smell of it or whatnot.
Timmy, you seem like it doesn’t really faze you
and you host a podcast show about it.
Yeah, I think what I’ve discovered is how incredibly rare
and like I say, discovering is kind of a journey
thing as opposed to a light went on thing.
But I’m discovering that our relationship is
incredibly rare, and through conversations with Mary
Jane, I think it’s because of that.
It’s like, you want to
have that common shared experience.
If we’re at a party and MJ goes for a
smoke, most couples being, let’s go take our smoke break,
and it has that kind of common kind of thing.
Or MJ was talking earlier to
me about golfing or weight weightlifting.
If your spouse is sharing that love, which for MJ
cannabis is such a strong part of her life, you
would assume that that other person should share in that
or else it’s going to cause a friction.
But what we’ve talked about is that
anything can cause that friction, right?
Like if you’re not in constant communication, if
somebody loves baseball and the other person doesn’t,
that could be just as dividing as this.
And I think it comes down to communication.
We talked very early on that yeah, I was willing to try it.
And when I decided that I wasn’t going to
do it anymore, it was a conversation piece.
It wasn’t like I started to put a wall up.
It wasn’t like I started to kind
we’ve talked about it the entire time.
And I think what surprises a lot of people is
the fact that we are able to not only relationally
be together, but to work together on this thing.
And I actually think it’s those differences that have
become a strength as opposed to a weakness.
And some people would think that it
might be the other way around.
I can honestly tell you that if we’re sitting down
and for some reason it’s kind of like, you know,
when you’re playing a board game and it’s one small
spot in the entire floor, but your cat finds the
board game to go lie on.
When she’s sitting beside me smoking, I still do
the smoke tends to always no matter which way
she blows, it blows towards my face.
And I can honestly say I still kind
of like do the but it’s a joke
now and it’s not a completely negative thing.
And I’m actually on the side of I
don’t believe secondhand smoke is a real thing.
I think we’re actually going to do a test
of that shortly to find out whether or not
I have any cannabis in my system.
Just by hanging out with her.
We thought that would be an
interesting thing to look at.
But I think communication has been key.
And I think people are just mostly shocked about
the fact that it’s not a peripheral issue.
It’s her life, it’s medicinally, what
keeps her able to function.
And by me not taking apart in that,
I think it’s just surprising to people.
And quite honestly, I think
it comes down to communication.
Well, it’s funny you say you’re not taking apart in
it because you are taking a part in it.
He’s just not actually consuming it because there are
times that when working especially, I try and push
through whatever it is that we’re doing.
And Timmy is very aware of the fact that I need
to take that moment to stop and go and consume.
And he’ll actually say to me,
I think you need a minute.
And most of the time you’re right.
It’s something that when you communicate, and even if
it’s something that your partner may not agree with,
if you’re honest and the other person is compassionate,
there should be a way that you can communicate
a resolve for the both of you.
I think that it was really
powerful hearing how you described communication.
Both of you described communication in
your relationship because it really is.
I mean, something like baseball, right?
That could be a division in a couple.
If one person wants to go to games all
the time or watch the games and the other
person just has no desire for it whatsoever, that
could cause a real riff in a relationship.
And so as long as you have that
strong communication and ultimately empathy, then I think
you can work through just about anything.
I think that’s just a great analogy.
Well, one of the struggles that we have
had, I guess, and mainly we’ve been learning
about each other throughout this whole process, but
me just understanding that she needs those breaks.
Like when I plan to do an event as a touring
comedian, we get up sometimes we’re up on the road at
5, we’re driving to a venue, getting there at 1, setting
things up, performing at 7, tearing down on the road at
11, to a hotel up at 5 in the morning.
I live in this you just go world.
And the concept of her needing to prepare for
even a night out, let alone a 10 day
tour, and realizing that she doesn’t just need them,
I guess my mindset previously would have been, oh,
don’t worry about just smoke it later.
You don’t need it.
It’s only a 3 hour drive,
just wait till you get there.
And now that I’ve come to realize
that she actually needs it, like medicinally.
Just like I used to have to take a
Tylenol before every show because I would get these
neck strains, which has been gone ever since
I’d taken yoga.
These are yoga shoulders, by the way.
I recommend it for everybody, but I think
that’s been a big struggle for me.
It’s just been learning that I need to
pace my day a little bit slower.
So even on podcast shooting days, we record 4 episodes currently in
1 day, just due to our way we can make it work
and in that we have to put in smoke breaks.
And normally I would just pump these things out and
so me adjusting to that, but I think that goes
back to what we talked about with communication, is that
we’re constantly being open with the fact that she needs
to stop and her trusting that I’m not going to
say, oh, you stoner.
The first time we had the conversation.
And he’s like, trying to plan it out.
How often do you need a break?
And I’m like, Well, I need one
like every hour and a half.
He’s like, what?
And then we talked about it and that’s
why you’re like, okay, because that’s the discussion
you need to have the discussion. Sure. Yeah.
Now tell me about the show.
I’m excited to learn.
So you have these 2 different backgrounds.
You have these two different individuals.
Tell me how you came together and why
you decided to put a show together.
Well, those are sort of 2 different questions.
I want to touch on briefly how we
even got together, which led to podcast, because
it was completely and utterly happenstance.
It’s not like I went to a pot event.
I was emceeing an event.
She was a 1950’s model.
It was a charity thing that we were doing.
We were raising money for a pet organization in the
town that I live in, and I had done this
this was my second year in a row.
And the first year I did it, I kind
of, like, blacked out when I was on stage.
I don’t know what happened.
My son said, what happened up there?
I have no idea.
I have photos of me posing and smiling,
but I don’t remember any of it.
So I was determined to get over
my stage fright for the following year.
Which was the year I ended up meeting Timmy.
Because I decided I was going to make up
this ruse about carrying these green infused cookies.
And I needed a police officer to come and bust
me the cookies because I figured if I did that.
Then I would be focused on the whole gig.
That I wouldn’t be worried about whatever it was
that made me black out the year before. Sure.
So I asked all my friends, and of
course, none of them wanted to do it.
I called the organizer, and she said, well, why don’t you
why don’t you reach out to the emcee, the host?
I said, okay, this guy right here.
So I met up with him the day of the
event, and I brought him a badge and a pile
of green cookies, and I ended up making that green
cookie gag a gag throughout the entire thing.
She brought the picture. That’s us. Amazing.
So that’s actually the first picture of us.
We weren’t together, but that’s the
first picture of us meeting.
So we actually have a documentation of the
first time we actually met each other.
And as you can see, it’s framed.
It’s special.
It is a very great photo. But yes, we played into
the cookie thing, and I kept eating these cookies and
pretending that I was getting a little high up.
As a comedian, I saw this as an
incredibly good angle to take this thing with.
And from there, we just started to communicate online,
and I think it was just one of those
crazy moments where the differences, there was opposites attract.
I don’t know, whatever.
I call it energy, because I knew from the
first time I met him there was something.
I think I even told him I could read palms
because I was like, I can read your palm.
And he put his hand in my hand and no word of a lie.
When I said this is your
lifeline, I felt chills, chills.
And I was like, now imagine also
30 plus years of conservative Christianity.
Not only she’s smoking weed, but she’s
saying, I can read your palm.
I’m like, you’re absolutely nuts.
But she was super cute.
So I continued the going forward, but from that
the podcast flowed fairly naturally because we saw
right away there was a creative synergy.
Our humor is very different.
I’m more of a dry wit.
She’s kind of a really kind of wild and crazy.
I mean, outfits speak a whole lot in this regard,
but I can go that route and she can come.
So we had these kind of these crossover humors.
So we created this TikTok, which was
launched silently and is only now beginning
like we never told friends or family.
It’s called Tim and Janice on TikTok.
If you want to go check that out.
The best way to look it up is just search on TikTok.
teamblueandyellow.
We made it secretly, though, because our relationship was
still secret due to a whole lot of factors.
And it gave us a chance to test
our creative, how we could work together without
any pressure, because we could just create these
characters without anybody from our friends.
And my fans didn’t know about it.
There was no added pressure.
It was all supposed to be organic and
allow us to see, can we work together?
Is that part of our relationship as well?
And that really did well organically.
It did incredibly well and encouraged us.
We were able to test our own working patterns and
habits, how we can film a bunch of videos and
get smoke breaks, all those types of things.
And then from there, just like, what else do we do?
What is the thing?
And we have so many things we want to talk about.
We’re both talkers.
We both love talking.
We could go conspiracy.
We would go 1980s, we could go down.
We thought we were going to do
an 80’s, 90’s podcast.
And then we realized that there was this void in
the cannabis space where almost from an outsider and I
haven’t heard and seen I don’t even know what your
podcast is really about, but my perception is that it
seemed like everything we came across was cannabis people talking
to cannabis people talking about things that the cannabis listeners
most of the time already know.
So questions weren’t being asked of guests.
That seemed like obvious questions, whereas I realized that
I was asking questions and she was like going,
oh, I have to look into that again.
It’s like refreshing kind of as a long time cannabis
user, it’s like, oh, going back to basics almost, and
seeing she started to see the value in that.
And we realized that what about a show where
it literally is from both sides, where a cannabis
user is talking to a non cannabis user.
And it’s not like I’m anti and she’s pro.
We’re both going to be pro, but I’m
going to be able to ask questions that
a cannabis user wouldn’t ask another cannabis user.
And we’ve already seen people who watch
our show, and we do suggest watching.
We are on audio as well, but we almost
produced what we would say is a TV show
that happens to be in a podcast studio.
So if you can catch it on YouTube.
We actually hold the world record for
most umbrellas opened in a podcast studio. We do.
We broke that record a couple of times ago.
So the podcast became this place for us to go.
That’s something that we are both interested in.
I’m interested in having the conversation.
She’s obviously interested in teaching
and giving the proper information.
And we saw that it was a void.
And I think by the feedback
we’re getting, we’re filling that void.
We’ve had people from both sides, cannabis
users saying, wow, this is entertaining.
It’s being presented in a different way.
We’re really enjoying this.
And we’ve had non cannabis users watching our show because
they may not use it, but they have kids that
use it, or they have elderly parents who use it,
or they’re thinking about using it but are scared because
they don’t know it’s the disinformation.
Yeah, we’re really proud of it.
We’re just trying to be unique and being us.
And I think there’s a certain energy that we have
that seems to work, that people seem to enjoy.
And we’re talking about a serious issue
in a creative, light hearted, unique way.
Well, my favorite comment that somebody said
about us was even Ray Charles would
see how well we work together.
I love that.
Well, and I can tell from you two being on here for
the audience tuned in now, what is the best way for
them to watch your show and to tune in?
Well, everything.
I think if we did it right, if you just go at
the Newbie and the Doobie on any on anything, we’re there.
So YouTube, it’s the Newbie and the Doobie.
Then we have the podcast as well, which I think
you just search it in any of the podcasters.
Facebook and Instagram is the Newbie and the Doobie.
I think we had to change it to Timmy and MJ
on TikTok because this is one thing that I found too,
maybe you guys have in terms of promoting what you do.
We had 4 accounts under the Newbie and
the Doobie, all written up different ways.
It’s the word doobie and we were
getting shadow banned immediately, like 0 views,
nothing was coming in, I think.
So now on TikTok, we’re just Timmy and MJ and
we’re starting to get a little bit on there.
But it’s amazing to me, something I’ve learned so far
during this podcast is how no wonder there’s so much
misinformation out there because you’re not even allowed to
really promote or talk about it in the online
space, something that’s legal in our own country.
So that bothers me as an entertainer and
as someone who wants to talk about it.
When I discovered how hard it was for us
to get a Tik tok account with the Newbie
and the Doobie name attached to it. It is.
I remember when we first started with Instagram, we
had like 3 accounts banned within the first week.
So it’s been a challenge.
And I am just so grateful to
both of you for joining WeedBudz Radio.
I’m excited to tune into more of The Newbie and
the Doobie available everywhere and on YouTube as well.
Right? YouTube. Yeah, YouTube.
We would recommend that you can listen to it
on your earphones going for a jog and we
think it’s still funny and entertaining and informational.
I call it edutainment.
I’m sure maybe you’ve heard that word, but like I said,
for the full experience, you’re not going to see this.
You’re not going to see the Giraffe.
We had Towel Day where we
were in towels the entire day.
We had Jackie Childs on Towel Day and she joined in.
That’s great.
So there are things that you
can’t see through your ears.
Well, I hope everyone will go on to YouTube, check
us out, check out the Newbie and the Doobie.
I’m so grateful to all of you for tuning in and
be sure to head over to our show notes on weebudzradio.com.
That way all of the links to connect
with Timmy and Mary Jane will be there.
I thank you both so much again for joining me.
Oh, thank you so much Ry.
I really appreciate it.
We will see you all in the next episode.
A New and Healthier Habit w/ John Friess
Hello Everyone!
Welcome to another episode of WeedBudz Radio, with your host Ry Russell. On this show we love taking individuals from every aspect of cannabis, From THC, to CBD, to Delta-8 and so on. For this episode we have invited John Friess, the Co-founder & President of Metolius Hemp Company. John’s passion for what cannabis can do and how it can heal others led him to where he is now, creating innovative products contains CBD as replacements for those who use nicotine & tobacco. From cannagars, to pre-rolls, and even dip! The goal of Metolius is to help those who can not quit by themselves, and to replace their current habit with a much healthier one. Join us and learn about John’s journey and how his journey ended up with him helping others. Tune in!
Guest:
John Friess
Metolius Hemp
Host:
Ry Russell
WeedBudz Radio
Manufactured Excellence
Knot Plastic
Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/ryzabove)
Contact the host or our team using the form below!

TRANSCRIPT:
Hey friends.
Welcome back to another episode of WeedBudz Radio.
I’m really excited to share our next guest with you.
We have John Friess, the co founder
and president of Metolius Hemp Company.
John, did I pronounce that right? Right. Yeah.
Metolius.
Metolius.
So John, I always ask people because I definitely
like most people, didn’t have this kind of normal
trajectory of using cannabis in high school and college
and then making my way into the industry.
It was a little unorthodox.
And so I’m always fascinated to hear how our
guests get into the cannabis and hemp space.
So I’m wondering, was this something that you just
had an idea one day that you are going
to partake in or was this something that you’ve
been involved with for a while?
Yeah, so I was researching CBD for our son
who’s on the autism spectrum disorder and also started
utilizing CBD for myself initially before his mother and
I approved the option for him to utilize it.
So starting with CBD tincture and started to see
the applications results for him, specifically in regards to
mood, behavior, sleep, and that was just tincture.
And about 3 years after that, I got a call from
my cousin who said we’re going to start growing hemp.
This is in 2017 and decided to move
out to central Oregon, join the farming company
and the rest is sort of history.
Were you living in Oregon at the
time or did you have to move? Yeah.
We were living in Portland, Oregon.
Moved to Bend, Oregon.
The company farmed for 3 seasons, went
from 1 farm to 4 to 7.
I know that’s not 7.
And we owned outright a couple of farms essentially.
And then the rest we coowned.
But what we saw was that
unfortunately, like almost all forms of
farming, the industry rapidly got commoditized.
Farmers were taking the brunt of the weight and the flower
that we were producing CBD flower at the time was being
put into consumer products that we thought were relatively subpar, way
too expensive and were essentially trying to find a niche or
a place to fit in the market.
And we thought there was something much, much bigger
here, which is that cannabis should be the direct
replacement for tobacco in all of its forms.
That’s fascinating because I’ve heard, and please tell me
more, but I’ve learned a little bit that the
tobacco industry is getting heavily regulated now.
I mean, it’s been regulated, but
heavily regulated where even menthol cigarettes
are being banned in some areas.
Are you seeing that as well?
Yeah, I mean, you’ve been seeing
massive taxation on everything from tobacco
based products to vaporizer based products.
And yes, you are seeing a ban on menthol cigarettes, which
has a series of issues attached to it as well.
But in the end, I think what they’re finding is
that to me okay, how should I say this?
The addictive nature of tobacco specifically because of
all the additives because of all the elements
that they place into cigarettes and things like
blunts and or cigars and or chewing tobacco.
Gives you a sense of how much
that behavior is wrote for people.
They can’t quit or they’re not prepared to quit.
And it’s sort of that adage of cigarettes
and beer before diapers is what they say
at many of the convenience stores.
And it’s a truism and it’s tough.
We think there is a way in which to get
people to still have that habit, if you will.
But we want to make a healthier habit.
They still have that vice, but we have a healthy vice.
So our belief is, and we’ve studied behavior modification
as much as we possibly can, and we’ve learned
a lot about it over the years, and the
truth of the matter is there are 3 primary
elements that come with any form of addiction.
Obviously, there’s the physiological effect, whether
it’s alcohol, nicotine, what have you.
2 is the social element.
Am I out with people? Am I interacting?
Am I taking a break?
And the third is a sense
of ownership on something that’s yours.
And even if that thing is unhealthy, and even
if you know it’s perhaps the least healthy thing
you can possibly do, I would put smoking a
cigarette or smoking cigarettes in that category.
If you can replace those 3 things, if
you can give someone a physiological effect, it’s
as good or better if you can allow
them to remain in those social situations.
And if in the end, you have the
ability to allow them to own something that
again, is ritualistic for them, that’s a vice.
But make it healthy.
All of a sudden you’re sitting on what
could be the largest opportunity we’ve ever seen
in the cannabis industry, which, again, is to
reduce or replace tobacco with cannabis.
Specifically non psychoactive CBD, CBG
and all the derivative cannabinoids.
Now, how did you come up with that recipe, if you will?
Were you looking for a tobacco replacement or
did you kind of stumble across this idea?
Candidly we stumbled across it.
We had been rolling what we consider
to be premium and enhanced prerolls.
So these were not just CBD cigarette alternatives.
They had cannabinoid content 5 to 7 times
that of a hemp cigarette you might find
at a dispensary or at a convenience store.
And what we found as well is that we
were mixing 2 types of flower, CBD and CBG.
And most people didn’t know what CBG was.
Many still don’t.
It’s just another cannabinoid.
They call it the stem cell cannabinoid.
But it has 2 primary properties
in regards to its efficacy.
One, it can actually help clean up
the CB1 and CB2 receptors. And two,
So if you have a high level of anything
in your system that’s cannabinoid based, it can help
sort of flush the system, if you will.
And then two, it can help increase the
bioavailability and the uptake of other cannabinoids.
And so we have been mixing CBD and
CBG and our pre rolls as a flower.
And then we decided we would coat them
with distillate tea free distillate, and then we
would enhance them with CBD isolate and CBD.
Kief by adding all 5 of those
byproducts into one preroll, people started saying
to us, I chew, I smoke cigarettes.
I have less cravings when I smoke this, too.
I am finding this to be a replacement.
And then the epiphany moment was last November when
one of our customers called and said, I’d like to an am
quitting cigars completely by smoking your cannagars
And so this is what he was ordering.
This is our 5 gram cannagar.
It is 5 grams of CBD, CBG flower
organic palm leaf, organic corn husk filter.
And inside is 5 grams of CBD, CBG flower
And then the outside is distillate.
Kief and isolate.
This product in particular was what he
wanted to utilize to quit smoking cigars.
He was smoking 2 to 3 a day.
And I said, what if we just
sent you a certain amount monthly that
would replace all the cigars you’re smoking? So, great.
I’ll order 30 of these a month.
And so that started our canna clubs.
Within about 2 weeks, we had about 14, 15
people signed up, all of whom were generally
replacing cigars with our 2 forms of cannagars
We have a 3 and a 5 grammer
And then we started finding people replacing cigarettes
with our pre rolls, either our half gram
or our 1 gram pre rolls.
And that started this whole movement where we
just said, let’s just start talking to people
about whether or not they’re utilizing tobacco, and
if they are, they can ultimately replace all
of their tobacco use with our solutions. That’s amazing.
And I know that the tobacco industry
also has a number of other products.
There’s gums, there’s pouches, there’s chewing tobacco.
I don’t even know all of
the products that necessarily exist.
Do you find that there are potential alternatives
for those types of products as well?
Yeah, absolutely.
Our internal vision is to reduce or
replace tobacco in all of its forms.
And our strategy is threefold.
Number one, it has to be the exact same form factor.
If you’re smoking a wide cigarette, a slim.
If you’re smoking a particular type of cigar, chewing
smokeless tobacco, we will match that form factor.
That’s number one, it’s critical.
Number two, we’ll match the price.
What are you spending now on tobacco based products?
We will match it so there’s no additional cost.
And three, we will make sure that in the end,
it’s delivered directly to your door, so you no longer
have to waste additional time away from life, work, family,
to go and receive or to retrieve tobacco based products.
We think those 3 elements make it way more
approachable and much more likely that you’ll be successful.
We understand that many of our customers
may never quit smoking completely, but we
say stop smoking, start toking.
I’ll give you this data point, which is pretty amazing.
The longest study ever done on cannabis
smoking is running about 21 years now.
And they looked at 4 types of people those who
never smoked anything in their lives, those that only smoke
cigarettes, those that smoke cigarettes in cannabis, and those that
only smoked cannabis after the 21 years.
What they’ve proven is that the people that have
the lowest propensity for lung disease, emphysema, and cancer
were the ones that smoke solely cannabis.
These joint years.
These are individuals are smoking at least about
a joint a day, if not more.
So they proved that you actually have a lower
likelihood of getting all of these conditions associated with
lung disease if you solely smoke cannabis.
That wasn’t a significant difference, but
there was a lower percentage.
Those that smoked only cigarettes versus those that never
smoked 21 times, 21 times off the charts, 21
times the likelihood of emphysema, lung disease, and cancer.
Those that smoked cigarettes and cannabis
dropped that by two thirds.
So what ends up happening is they’ve proven
that cannabis not only has 5 anticancer properties,
but in that particular study, which was thousands
of individuals that participated controlled study, they found
that you got about a twothirds lower likelihood
of having cancer, lung disease and emphysema by
just adding cannabis to your tobacco use.
Our goal is get off tobacco completely.
If you cannot, reducing it is dramatically better
than not reducing it, and we will support
you in whatever you want to do.
If you’re not ready to quit, we just
like you to consider taking a healthier hit.
Well, it sounds like you all really do the
research to back what it is that you’re doing.
And I’m interested because you all seem
so far ahead of the curve already.
And I’m curious, do you see yourself as that or do
you see yourself as having a lot more work to go?
I think we have a long way to go for sure
from a marketing and total impact that we want to have.
We would love to have millions of
people work with us if possible.
With that being stated, we do like to
attempt to launch products first, and we’ve been
able to do that thus far.
Each of our products were the first to market.
And so we’re always just going out in the marketplace,
seeing what exists and then saying, how can we replace
that with a product that, again, same form factor, same
price, and ultimately direct to your door.
When we launched the lip dips, for example, people
who got 3 flavors now cherry, mint, and orange.
But these are direct replacements
for Zen or smokeless tobacco.
So this comes with 15 pouches in it.
They’re almost identical to what a Zen
pouch looks like, feels like, acts like.
This, however, has 0 nicotine,
0 additives, 0 fillers.
This is 3 organic ingredients in total and
it delivers 100 mg of CBD per pouch.
And the most bizarre thing is dipping generally
is attributed to males, but about 45% of
the users of this product are female.
Now, you can put it in your lip in one
of the quadrants or whatever you sip, so you can
drop it into your tea or coffee, whatever you want.
The CBD will be distributed within the beverage.
But my point is, launching this is rapidly becoming
one of our best sellers, actually top two.
And all it is is an alternative that
is exactly what you wanted and needed.
And here’s the difference.
Nicotine, everyone knows what it does for you.
It definitely can immediately decrease
anxiety for many people.
It can give you a sense of euphoria and
not significant, but something of a body high.
CBD, though non psychoactive, does produce
a form of a high.
That high, though, is a sense of mental
clarity, decreased inflammation for many people, a greater
sense of I’m doing something good for myself.
And so the results, right, we can only make certain
claims, or very few claims, but once you give someone
exactly the same thing and it’s exponentially better.
To me, it’s no different than the company here in
Oregon that just launched an IPA based THC drink.
It is non alcoholic.
They have the right amount of THC in
it so that it gives you a similar
result physiologically to having a single beer.
But what they did is they put it into a
glass brown bottle and labeled it just like a beer.
All other forms of sales of these THC products
that were beverages were not selling as well as
they had hoped until they match the form factor.
You match the form factor, you give it
viable physiological results that are similar or even
better because you don’t wake up hungover.
Right, all of that.
It’s just the way the world we think
will go because that’s what people want.
I love that.
So that can also be essentially used
as a tea bag as well.
Yes, we’re going to probably launch this in a
couple of different forms, but yes, one of the
ways that we make this approachable and we’ve definitely
found that all of our products that are non
smokable are often the entry point for our customers.
So whether it’s a dip, whether it’s our sleep powder
that you take on a nightly basis, whether it’s our
Pain stick and pain roller, which many companies have, many
companies have, these allow you to start to bring CBD
into your life, or CBD and CBG as well as
other elements of the plant, but in a way that
doesn’t make you feel like you have to smoke.
But yes, this product in particular, you can just
drop it again in your lip or whatever you
sip and that gives people an option.
But what we do find is we go out
and we do events on a continual basis.
We have 2 pretty significant events this week.
We just give out samples of deeds.
And so our whole approach to every event
is, would you like a free CBD sample?
And people come up, we say, we have
the world’s first fully organic lip dips.
This is 100 milligrams of CBD.
This is the equivalent of
3 to 4 tincture droppers.
And then we say we say this to
them, what are you paying for tincture?
And I’m like, oh, I bought a bottle.
It was $70. It was $50.
I once bought one for $120.
Great, we’ll sell you this for $15.
And this is going to be the equivalent
of up to 3 tincture bottles of CBD.
And then what ends up happening is, regardless, essentially of
age, gender, all of that, people just grab it and
they’re like, so just throw it right here?
And we’re like, yes, and just do it.
90 year old women, 55 year old
guys in wheelchair, it doesn’t matter.
They just find it highly approachable.
Now, what separates because there’s for those tuned in,
there’s all kinds of CBD products on the market.
What separates a premium product from just
a standard product off the shelf?
I think it’s akin to what you might
see with wineries and breweries or food.
First off, it’s got to be local or
start local and hopefully be manufactured local.
Two organic, if at all possible.
Three, handcrafted and artisan.
And then fourth, and finally, a level of
quality that you can see, taste, feel, you
know, it’s there, it’s hitting on the senses.
And that’s what we attempt to do.
So when we show someone our cannagar,
they’re like, oh, so you make blunts?
We’re like, no, we don’t make blunts.
We make the world’s first premium enhanced cannagar.
And then you show them this
and they’re like, what is that?
And you’re like, this is almost an 8th
of cannabis in a device that’s all organic,
including the filter, including the paper, including the
flower, including the keif and the isolate.
And this will smoke for 35 to 45 minutes.
This is probably the equivalent of about
10 to 15, depending on which CBD
preroll you might purchase at a store.
And people are just like, that
was an experience I’ve never had.
First off, our tagline is this for this
product, it tastes like grass, not ass.
In the end, we’re trying to convert people.
I think the number one reason that people
want a premium product in the past was
because they felt like it was somehow definitive
of where they were at in life, perhaps.
And now I think we’re seeing a movement,
especially, I think food sort of drove this.
People are like, I just want quality food.
I’m willing to spend a little
bit extra if it’s quality.
And that has obviously permeated so
many other industries, including cannabis.
So we only want to do premium and enhanced, and
we want to build a brand that not only provides
that, but provides it at an affordable cost.
That’s the key.
Some of our products are very expensive if they’re
one offs, but that’s why the clubs make so
much sense, is because if you commit to us
to try and reduce replace tobacco, we will commit
to you at the lowest possible price.
We’re totally vertically integrated,
direct to your door.
We do not have any middlemen.
And so, for us, we can send you something the
same cost as a lip pouch, like a zen.
We can send you something that is exactly the same
cost as your Marlboro, or something that’s the same cost
as your cigar or whatever cigars you choose.
And that’s really what makes it work.
That’s amazing.
John, one last question for you.
Because you’ve been building
such an incredible business.
I’m curious, what are some of
the roadblocks that you’ve had?
Because all businesses have something that they have
to overcome, and especially in this space.
So what is one of the biggest challenges you all
have had to overcome and how did you overcome it?
Yeah, I’d say the primary hurdles in the
beginning were just associated with licensure and regulation,
which is great that it’s in place at
the level that it is, including in CBD
and on the non psychoactive side of cannabis.
So that was significant.
Everything from getting a manufacturing facility and getting
a lease, everything from getting licensure and approvals
make each and every one of our products,
testing every single 30 pound batch of flower,
testing every byproduct that goes into our products,
testing every finished product.
I don’t think the consumer quite as aware,
nor should they be, of what it takes
to get one of these products to you.
This is not like supplements where I
can just throw powder into a pill.
And if I’m in a particular state in the
United States, I can ship it to you and
claim that it can do all these wonderful things.
There are certain things we can and cannot say.
There is definitely a significant amount of testing
and regulation that is only growing with time.
And keeping up to speed with that,
I’d say, was the primary hurdle.
I’d say the secondary hurdle is no different than
any company in any industry in today’s world.
Marketing has become so significantly difficult and fragmented, it’s
as if you’re sitting in a meeting and saying,
how are we going to find our customers?
Everyone’s like, oh, we’re going to do events, we’re going
to do social, we’re going to do activation events, we’re
going to do paid placement, we’re going to get ambassadors
and influencers, we’re going to do the list goes on
and on and on and on.
And so I think that’s probably the most difficult
thing that we face, which I think is the
most difficult thing that every company faces, because the
best companies with the best products don’t always win.
They often don’t win the best marketed
products are the ones that win.
And that’s difficult to do when you’re not willing
to just spend cash as if it’s free.
And so I’d say those are probably
the two biggest hurdles we’ve faced.
I think what we’re attempting to do is just build
a brand that just reflects how our team lives and
how our customers live, which is we try to do
things that are valuable to individuals in society, but also
try to maintain some semblance of balance and have a
lifestyle that’s very active and chill.
Many of us on our team didn’t live that life, including
myself, for a number of years, and just come to the
point where you realize I can’t wake up every day and
work this hard on business, friendships, family, all of it, and
feel as though I don’t have any time to live in
a sense of just being in the world.
Our lives become so insanely packed with tasks and
activities that I just feel like most Americans at
least don’t take the time or are finding the
time to just sit back, relax, and sort of
think about where their lives are at and where
things are at and how they might change things.
So we’re trying to assist them in that
process with arguably one of the things that’s
maybe causing the most issues in their life.
If you are smoking 25 cigarettes a day and you’re
constantly having to go outside or leave social situations and
or are dealing with health issues and or your spouses
like, you smell all the time, I hate this habit.
What if you could change those things?
We literally have customers of ours now that
smoke our cannagars inside their homes and their
spouses are like, this is great.
I love the smell, not a problem.
And it’s just great that
you’re here interacting with us.
You’re not outside all of a sudden for an
hour and a half taking in a cigar.
Those things make a real difference with time.
But most importantly is how does it
impact your body and your mind?
And that’s the beautiful thing.
I know nicotine has its value, for sure.
And nicotine alone as a chemical
is not all that bad, but it’s all the things
that are around it that make it so terrible.
And so in the end, I think that’s
how we’re going to try to differentiate it’s.
Just constantly show people via content.
This is at least how we’re attempting to live life.
This is what we’re trying to create
as a company and a brand.
And let us help you.
Let us help you. No judgment.
Let’s go again.
Let’s reduce or replace everything
from tobacco, eventually pharmaceutical drugs.
We’re going to attempt to do some
things in regards to replacing alcohol.
We think it’s the most medicinally rich plant
on earth, and we think that’s been proven.
And we just want to make it accessible
to everybody in whatever form works for you. Amazing.
And for those that want to check out your products,
what is the best way for them to go to
your website and stay in contact with you? John?
Yeah, just go to metoliushemp.com
It’s metoliushemp.com or metolius.market
Either one.
That’s our web presence there.
You can request a sample if you would like.
Just email us at rollwithus@metoliushemp
or fill out the contact form on the website.
We’ll send you a sample of a product,
any one of our products you’d like.
See if it works for you,
see if it’s advocacious for you.
And then, of course, if you want to take one
additional step, that’s not quite a high level of commitment.
Purchase some products.
We usually have great promos going on.
Try them for a couple of days, a
couple of weeks, couple of months, and then
if it works for you, join the club.
Our clubs are by far the biggest focus of the
company because they provide anywhere from 30% to 73% off
retail, depending on the club and what we can afford.
And just to be honest, we do such a
nominal markup, some people are like, wait, you only
do a 15 or 21% markup over costs.
We do that because we understand it’s
the only way this is going to work.
I cannot charge someone the equivalent of $2 for one of
our pouches when they can get a Zen for $0.40.
We have to match the price, and the only way
to do that is through vertical integration and direct consumer.
Amazing.
Well, John, thank you so much for sharing your company
and your team and your products with me today.
Of course. Thank you.
This has been awesome.
And nice work on hitting over 100 episodes.
That’s freaking huge.
I appreciate it and I’m so grateful for
all of you tuning in as well.
Be sure to head over to
our show notes on weedbudzradio.com.
We’ll have all of the links to connect with
John and the company and check out their products.
We’ll see you in the next episode.
Cannabis & Incarceration w/ Santino Martinez & Shane Hammer
Hello Friends!
We want to welcome you to another important episode of WeedBudz Radio, with your host Ry Russell. Today we are re-introducing a guest who’s energy we loved so much he got invited back, Santino Martinez. Along with Tino we have a personal friend and powerhouse in the cannabis industry, Shane Hammer. Together these two came on to explain the social injustices people face today regarding cannabis, and more specifically inmates still incarcerated over cannabis related crimes. Kushy and 40 Tons are teaming up to end the war on drugs and to share the story of Corvain Cooper, who was given a life sentence for a cannabis crime, and granted clemency by former president Donald Trump. The family built this brand and gives proceeds directly to those 40 thousand still incarcerated, whether putting it on their books, helping with travel arrangements, or programs to help get former prisoners on their feet. Join us and learn how these two are giving back to the community and helping those who are struggling. Tune in!
Guests:
Shane Hammer & Santino Martinez
Kushy
Design Kush
40 Tons
Host:
Ry Russell
WeedBudz Radio
Manufactured Excellence
Knot Plastic
Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/ryzabove)
Contact the host or our team using the form below

TRANSCRIPT:
Hey, everyone.
Welcome back to another incredible
episode of WeedBudz Radio.
I’m your host Ry and I’ve got
2 amazing guests with me today.
One might look very familiar to all of you.
Santino, thanks for coming back.
Oh, you know it.
Thank you for having us Ry.
It’s always a pleasure being on the show.
And we have a new face on WeedBudz Radio, Shane Hammer.
Shane, welcome to WeedBudz.
Thanks for having me Ry.
Absolutely.
Well, Santino, the last time you were here, we talked
a little bit about some of the music that you
are making, some of the videos that you have done.
I wanted to follow up with that
and just learn a little bit more.
How was the response to that and
what are you working on now?
Yeah, I mean, in the music game,
it’s always the coin toss, right?
You have great expectations for the projects you do
and quality was fine and those sorts of things.
And the people who we wanted to
receive the video well, received it well.
So the industry partners that we have and the
people who we were shouting out like Michael Thompson,
I think it helped to get the message across
about his story and what he had going on.
It did what it needed to do for us.
I got to perform those songs out in
Arizona, Texas for a couple of weed events.
So I think I was overall happy
with the music that was made.
That’s amazing.
Well, congratulations again.
I love listening to it.
I love watching and I saw a couple
of Instagram stories of you performing live.
What was it like to finally be live again?
It was amazing.
And I’m glad that now we’re starting to open up again.
I’m seeing more shows, even locally,
starting to open up for me.
It’s what I love to do.
So getting back out, seeing the people, getting to tell
my story in front of a crowd again was great.
Can’t wait for more. Awesome.
Well, I can’t wait for more as well.
And Shane, you are a new face to WeedBudz Radio.
You’re not a new face to me.
Good friend here.
And I’ve been following your journey, I guess it’s been almost
2 years now and I realized we’ve talked so much about
the work that you do in the cannabis industry and I
want to get into that, but like we did with Santino
when he was here last time, I’m curious what you are
doing before you got into the cannabis industry.
I don’t think we really talked about that before.
No, I don’t think we’ve covered that.
And that’s a great question.
That’s always a question that is top
of mind for a lot of people.
What did you do before this?
So, for me, I did a couple
of other startups in the marketing space.
I did a pretty long run at Verizon
Wireless, a little bit of time at BMW.
But, yeah, for the most part, I’d say for
about the last four and a half, five years I’ve
been doing the startup life and working on some
branding projects and things like that.
Tyler Aldridge and I connected about what would
be 2 years ago and had some pretty
good success with a couple of brands.
The market said yes to Kushy.
So we’re doing Kushy and super excited to
offer these tools to folks and got a
pretty awesome promo coming out as well.
Aside from that, not much, man.
I’m a pretty regular guy.
Santino and I are laughing.
I don’t know that anything is regular about you.
You’re a unique individual, that is for sure.
And you mentioned Kushy.
I’d love to learn a little bit.
I know you and Tyler kind of built out
this startup and you are heavily involved in kind
of the ecommerce space and development space.
I was wondering if you could kind of take us on
a journey, if you will, from, I think so many startups
in the cannabis industry in the last few years.
They’ve really developed fast, they
evolve fast, they pivot quick.
And so I’d love for you to kind of share
a little bit about what that journey looked like.
Yeah, you definitely hit the nail on the head there.
This niche is moving super quick and Tyler
is kind of a genius when it comes
to developing out the branding kit.
And so we have the opportunity to put
a couple on the marketplace and really see
what was attainable for our team.
But the big picture for us
was we wanted to help people.
We saw that need for folks needing help with
basically all things digital media, especially in cannabis.
They’re already working with a lot of
aches and pains and legal hurdles even.
But yeah, that said, we put out Design
Kush, had a handful of great clients, did
a couple of pro bono projects.
Kushy was kind of the asset to that.
It’s kind of the software side of things.
So it’s our website builder social media toolbox
and then we’ve got kind of a full
reporting suite that goes with that and there’s
much more that goes with it as well.
But that all said Ry, for us, we wanted
to help people, so we wanted to impact the
space but also make sure that we were doing
our part with the reform around social justice. Right?
And so we did last prisoner projects
website through our Design Kush brand.
And right now we’re working with really one of my
favorite brands that I found today in the cannabis space.
It’s a 40 Tons brand.
It’s ran by a really great organization.
Kushy is doing a pro bono project with them and we’re
rolling up our sleeves on a couple of other efforts.
But yeah, man, we’re just really excited.
The crazy thing actually is, and I don’t think a
lot of people know this, Kushy is kind of a
revamped model we had our first Kushy client back in
2018, really before the market really took off, like it
just did in this last year.
But that all said, I guess just looking back
on it, talking about pivoting and aches and pains
and hurdles, it took us basically, what’s, a little
over 3 years just to get a brand name
that sticks, grab at least a dozen use cases
with great customer success and customer satisfaction, and have
the market say, yes, we want more.
But what you also look at is we
pivoted away from a couple of different projects
because it just didn’t make sense.
And I think if you’re in the cannabis
space, you know that, but if you’re getting
into the cannabis space, you should be prepared
to make educated decisions rather quickly.
That’s basically it there.
I know Tino’s got a pretty solid
outline on the 40 Tons brand.
I’d love to plug that a little bit just because
the way that Kushy and 40 Tons are going to
be working together, I think it’s going to be a
real game changer to kind of showcase what folks can
do when they team up together.
So I don’t know if I’d be taking over your
show, but can Tino talk a little bit about that?
Absolutely.
Yeah, definitely.
So 40 Tons of the brand with a powerful story. Right.
Corvain Cooper was given a
life sentence for cannabis crime.
He was granted clemency by
the former President Donald Trump.
And as he was exiting the presidency,
Anthony Allegretti, Lauriel Allegretti, his wife and
Corvain, they got together, built this brand.
It’s a clothing brand, lifestyle brand that
gives money back directly to the people
impacted by the war on drugs. Right.
So all of these 40,000, it says right here
on the side, free the 40K that’s for the 40,000
prisoners who are still locked away for cannabis offenses.
So what they do is they take proceeds
from the clothes that they make, and they’ll
give them directly to the people impacted.
So they’ll put money on their books.
They are trying to establish and facilitate visitation so
that families in one state with loved ones who
are locked away in another state can go and
travel to see those people while they’re incarcerated.
They also use that money to do programs like
coding for not only children in underserved neighborhoods, but
also for the formerly incarcerated as well, right?
So to give life options and choices to
these people who are coming out of prison.
We all know it’s difficult for a person with a
felony on their record to be existing and thriving in
the world after you get out of prison.
So they’re trying to bridge that gap
and create those possibilities for them.
And their story is great.
They’ve been doing amazing things.
They’re growing so fast.
They’re all over the place.
I’m sure you’ve seen them on
social media just going wild.
We definitely took their story to heart and wanted
to help them as much as we could.
So we’ve been partnering with them
to create this 710 promo, right?
We all know 710 the
national holiday for cannabis concentrates.
So we have a 710 promotion going on with
them where we’re trying to give $40,000 back to
40 Tons to help the 40K prisoners, right?
So, yeah, we can get into the details
of that maybe a little bit later.
I’ll show our promo as we come to a close.
Well, I know that when I first met
you, Shane and Tino, that I remember you were
working on the Last Prisoner Projects website.
I remember how passionate the
entire team was about that.
And this seems like such a natural fit into
the ecosystem that which you are all creating.
And so I know I’m grateful and I know
that the audience is tremendously grateful that organizations are
looking at this in finding ways to get involved
because there are so many companies and startups and
agencies within the cannabis space that I think have
a real opportunity and obligation, really, right?
This is our community.
So I love that this aligns so
well with what you’re working on.
And I’m curious, Shane and Santino, we’ve talked about it
in your music in the last time that we met.
But Shane, where does this passion come from?
How do you get the entire team’s
buy in into these sorts of organizations?
Not that it’s hard, but just how do you
orchestrate something like that while building a startup?
That’s a great question, and I think
Tino would agree when I say this.
I think it’s just a certain type
of person comes into the cannabis space. Right.
Cannabis helps a lot of people, but I think
when you have a certain skill set and you’re
maybe slightly enabled or for me, I just feel
like it’s almost my civic duty in some sense.
But all members of the team we have now and
even folks we worked with in the past, they’ve all
jumped on board themselves just because they see how important
it is, just like we all do.
And to give you a little bit of an
insight, actually, I think everybody has their own story.
We just heard Tino explain Corvain’s story and actually, to
kind of backpedal, it is a great fit with that
too ride because Corvain is actually on the LPP board
and so him working over with 40 Tons and establishing
that with Anthony and his wife and them running that
and how Design Kush are doing the pro bono project on
that website, it all makes sense.
But to get back to what I was saying, until
you really ask someone that question, you might not know.
But for me, I’ve got 2 good
friends that have been locked up.
I’ve got one good friend that’s still locked up.
And then this is just for basically
growing a plant, farming a plant.
A plant that saves lives and helps people
and gets people off real bad drugs and
helps people eat who can’t eat.
I mean, I can probably name over a hundred
different things that the plant does, but for me,
I take a lot of passion of that.
And I had a friend get real depressed over a
court case that he was going to hit and he ended
up, what some people say is he took his life.
I just want to say it was a bad overdose on
a bad drug, but yeah, I’ve just seen it firsthand, man.
It impacted me in some type of way.
And so I’m really passionate about this
40 Tons and Kushy project right now.
And we’re going to be able to uplift
40 brands and some dispensaries in the process,
but also bring everybody together and like Tino
was saying, offer financial support and legal services
and the visiting program is huge, man.
Some of these people, you get locked up in Colorado
when you’re in the feds, you might get shipped down
to Florida and that’s hard to get down there
for some folks, it’s literally impossible
or like a holiday gift program.
And it’s like these are lost souls they’re forgotten, which
is sad, but this is a really small initiative too.
So for us, at the end of the day, we’re
hoping what this is going to do is springboard other
companies into taking these types of initiatives, getting creative with
their marketing, but being able to put in the effort
to not give up to make sure it happened, right?
That’s where I stand on that.
And I would say the sad thing is I’m
one of lots of people that have had family,
friends, and different associates get locked up.
And if you really think about
it too, man, it’s fucking crazy.
Pardon my French, but just think about it.
There’s a little over what?
Over 40,000 folks just sitting in an 8 by 8.
I think how big they are.
I was stretching it, man. Shit, my bad.
So, yeah, it sucks, man.
I’ve cried over it and I’m not even in it.
So I’m out here and doing as much as we can do.
We feel like a lot of good success is
going to come from this Kushy, 40 Tons promotion.
So we’re super excited.
Like I said, we’ve got that list.
We’re basically looking for 40 businesses to say
yes to it and check it out.
We’re already starting to get people on the list
and so we feel super confident on it.
And we were going to run it through 710 and kind of
do this thing, but we got such good feedback we’re going to
push it through to October and we got a couple of other
surprises coming out too, so it should be fun. Amazing.
Well, there’s going to be a lot to talk about.
Santino, what were you going to say there?
Oh yeah, now just to piggyback, right?
I think you said it right, Ry.
We have an obligation.
An obligation.
This is our industry.
We need to kind of own the fact that
while people are out on the outside making millions
of dollars, there’s companies valued in the billions.
States are making hundreds of billions of
dollars off the revenue from this plant, right?
Then we need to have a hand also in correcting
the wrong that was incarcerated people for this plant.
Like Shane says, right?
We all know somebody at this point.
We all know somebody who’s either been arrested, stopped and
frisked any kind of interaction with police and the law
over cannabis. It’s bullshit, and it has to stop.
And we just had a great olympian, right?
Or potential olympian just lose her opportunity
to go shine on the world stage
because of this plant, Sha’Carri
So this is just ridiculous.
So anything that we can do to reverse the
wrongs, right the wrongs, we need to do that.
It’s really tough, too, when we’ve got
superstars in those types of situations.
But then we’ve also got the White
House recommend classifying cannabis retailers alongside smoke
shop, which is I don’t know, it’s
kind of contradicting everything that’s going on.
And you’ve got Connecticut launching, like, an awesome
informational website on cannabis up in Alaska,
they just put someone on the board.
I’m not saying this correctly.
I’m naive to the exact title, but some type of cannabis
educator is now sitting up on the board up there.
And then we’ve got companies like Greenflowers,
they’re getting all their programs set up
with a bunch of different colleges.
And then just this morning I was reading I think
it was from March to January, New York’s arrests, it
was like 90% people of color correlated to cannabis.
And it’s like, how can we have that going on
on one facet and then all this other positive stuff?
So it’s like it has to end, and we
all have to come together to make that happen.
I like that you consider a civic duty.
I think that’s something that more organizations can really take
a look at and see how do they get involved?
I think a lot of organizations try to get
involved in some way or another, but you’ve identified
multiple ways that individuals and organizations can get involved.
I’d love to talk a little bit about Kushy
and what Kushy is and who it serves and
tell me a little bit about the platform.
Yeah, absolutely, man.
It’s real simple.
We’re big fans of the acronym KISS.
Keep it stupid simple.
So for us, we had a bunch of success over the years,
and that was with this kind of really the secret sauce.
And so we implemented that on the Kushy
and it’s a website builder, so you can
quickly and easily create a beautiful, elegant website.
They look perfect on every device.
So it’s a responsive setup.
So that means it works on
a desktop, a tablet, mobile device.
And we just got the progressive web
app feature set up because, excuse me,
Google, they basically run everything.
And the other couple of search engines, so
they’re saying, hey, we’re going to rank websites
higher when you have this switch flipped.
Basically we’ve got the website segment of it,
and then we’ve got the social media toolbox,
or what we like to call campaign.
This is where you can create and organize content.
You can also automate, post, scheduling, and then
you can manage all your channels with these.
And there’s a really nice dashboard
where you see all this.
You can add your team members, if you’ve got some team
members that are like, hey, look, social media is not my
thing, but I’d love to be involved in it, and maybe
I’m in a director role and I need to submit approvals.
You can send this stuff right to someone’s
phone and they can comment on it and
make any recommendations or changes they want.
Then we’ve also got, like I said,
a pretty extensive reporting segment to this.
So with the website and all the social media, we’re
reporting on all those analytics and they kind of talk
to each other in a sense because we track all
the website traffic, where it’s coming from, Instagram, Direct, if
you’re running ads and what have you.
But then also on the social media side, we’re
tracking all the data as well, so you can
really get in there and refine your approach.
That all said, it’s also backed by a cannabis agency.
The first brand, all this was Design
Kush, where we had the initial success.
And so with that said, customer success and
customer satisfaction, those are our real big KPIs.
We look at through the business development
side of things with Kushy, and we’ve
got a plethora of brands on it.
Right now, our own Design Kush
agency is built through the platform.
The Hawaii Cannabis Association is built on there,
40 Tons who we were just speaking on
their website is built on there.
And then we’ve got a plethora of
other dispensaries, nonprofits, different CBD brands.
Basically, we wanted to test the market and
see if this could help basically everybody.
So, yeah, right now, Tyler, I don’t even know if
I’m supposed to say this, but I’m going to.
Tyler’s working on the kind of
the do it yourself portion.
I’ve been excited about this for the last few months.
I told a couple of people about it behind the scenes.
But yeah, that’s coming out here in the future where
someone can actually just go on there and pick out
a template that’s already kind of premade and has some
slight directional elements to it that says, throw your logo
here, add call to action here.
And then for all the DIYers out there and
people come into the space, or the people who
have great marketing teams that are like, hey, we
want to manage all this stuff ourselves.
It’s kind of all inclusive. So that’s
basically the longer version on Kushy.
I know that with all these different
tools out there, you can use any
kind of scheduling tool or website builder.
I just know in the cannabis space, it’s
nice to have peace of mind that you’re
working with a team that speaks the language.
I worked as a budtender way back
when and professionally advocated for amendment 64.
He’s at least a decade of farming under his belt,
if not more, and his whole family comes from a
really awesome history of farming and what not.
And then the rest of the team, all
the team members we’ve had have just been
really passionate about the plant first.
I think that’s what it is.
Actually, speaking of, I got my
first little plant growing ever, actually.
Yeah, man, it’s a little Rocky Mountain strain.
I just flipped a little seed and some
dirt and just letting mother nature rain on
it and wind and all the things.
And actually me and my partner Lauren, we went camping for
what, 3, 4 days, man, and we came back and this
little lady hopefully is a couple of inches big.
Anyways, that’s Kushy. Tino, I don’t know. What did I miss man?
I probably missed some stuff.
Well, no, just brands that we like to help, right?
I think even with Design Kush and even
though we’ve helped a plethora of brands who
have all kinds of different motives, right?
I think the brands that we do want to
reach out to and do want to help tend
to be those in the equity space, right?
Women owned businesses, right?
Trying to help conscious businesses.
Businesses with the goals of not only
just promoting the plant health, wellness, right?
But also companies who aren’t just trying to come
in here and be the Walmart of weed.
I know we all have lofty aspirations
and goals in this space, right.
We all want to go and get it, and that’s fine.
There’s enough to get.
But the cannabis culture is based on community.
The cannabis culture is based on sharing, right?
We pass the joint, you pass the peace
pipe around the table, right around the horn.
Let’s get it.
So those are the kinds of owners
and operators that we’re trying to find.
People with a sense of what this
culture actually is, what it means.
The patients that this plant helps as well, right?
People with patience in mind, those are the
types of businesses that we’d like to help. Amazing.
Well, and before we wrap up, if we are one
of those businesses, and I know we have a lot
tuned in, if we’re one of those businesses, how do
we connect with you two gentlemen and how do we
find out, learn more, how we can get involved?
Great question. Go ahead.
Yes, go ahead.
Take it away, Shane.
I’ll just say, man, same old, same old.
trykushy.com
Tino and I and the rest of
the team, we’re usually on the website chat.
So if you have any questions, you
could just chat with us right away.
You could call or text us as well.
I can plug that number here in about 20 seconds.
Find us on all of the
social media @trykushy, trykushy .com like you said.
I’m never scared to say what’s up to
you on my personal Instagram, anything like that.
Please come say what’s up to me.
I use my artist’s name.
We shared that last time, Ry, for sure.
But it’s Dr. Spaztastic for everybody
who doesn’t know Santino Martinez.
If you need to find me through name and
yeah, we’re here to talk with you, walk you
through the process, answer any questions that you have.
If it’s not about the service, about
ways that you can improve your business.
If we can give you helpful tips, we love to do that.
We were just doing that today with
a company called the Lit Dump. They’re awesome.
You need to check them out. Cool.
Awesome little product device that just blocks the
wind for you when you’re trying to smoke.
Go check them out.
Go check them out.
And that number is 720-741-7267.
If you want to talk to a real
person, you can also text that number.
It’s 720-741-7267.
You can also just email
Santino and I trykushy.com
Shane and then Santino.
But yeah, otherwise it’s a website chat.
We’re always here. Awesome.
Well, gentlemen, thank you both so
much for joining me today. Yeah, thank you, Ry.
It’s always a pleasure.
Man absolutely.
And thanks to all of you for tuning in.
What’s that, Shane?
Excited to see what you have coming out.
Man yes, we’ve got the golf tees that
we just launched, so it’s been crazy over
here in the tinker lab for sure.
But I’m just so grateful for all of you, for
the 2 of these fine gentlemen, all of you tuning
in to another episode of WeedBudz Radio.
Be sure to head over to the show notes.
We’ll have the contact info for both of them.
And we’ll see you all in the next episode. Take care.
Delta-8 and Wellness, Are They a Match? W/ Jennifer Babaian
Hello again friends! Welcome to another amazing episode of WeedBudz Radio! On our show we enjoy shining a spotlight and featuring individuals and companies who are striving to push the cannabis industry and more importantly the community forward. Our next guest is no exception, our Maine man Ry is sitting down with Jennifer Babaian, the Owner of 7 Leaf Clover in NY! Jennifer has dedicated her life to wellness and enhancing the lives of individuals who can benefit from CBD and Delta-8. And now, Jen has a new product! A Delta-8 Pizza! Tune in and find out more about the awesome products 7 Leaf has to offer, and why this spot in NY is a powerhouse of the industry. Join us!
Guest:
Jennifer Babaian
7 Leaf Clover
Host:
Ry Russell
WeedBudz Radio
Knot Plastic
Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/ryzabove)
Contact the host our our team using the form below!

Social Media & Cannabis w/ Eman Abdou
Hello Friends! Welcome to another amazing episode of WeedBudz Radio. On today’s episode we discuss promoting cannabis on social media and how to do it the right way. If you are listening and either own a business or are an individual in the cannabis space who has tried to promote on your socials, you understand what we mean. We have heard of accounts being suspended, banned, and months to years of activity immediately gone. Thankfully our guest today has some experience in managing, avoiding, and fixing this. Our host Ry sits down with Eman Abdou, graphic designer/social media manager of Eman Designs. Tune in and learn how to safely educate the community about your product!
Guest:
Eman Abdou
Eman Designs
Host:
Ry Russell
WeedBudz Radio
Knot Plastic
Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/ryzabove)
Contact the host or our staff using the form below!

Sustainability in Cannabis w/ Jason Lammers
On today’s episode of WeedBudz Radio, Ry sits down with our next guest, who works with cannabis packaging and is also involved on the policy side, insuring the industry is living up to its commitment with sustainability, Jason Lammers. A big voice in the cannabis community, GM at 420WholesalePack.com and a member of The Cannabis Alliance. These two met at the Emerge Virtual Cannabis Conference where they discussed sustainability, and were joined by Heather Richmond as well as many other pioneers in cannabis. Join us as we discuss why making our industry long term requires sustainability.
Guest:
Jason Lammers
420WholesalePack.com
The Cannabis Alliance
Host:
Ry Russell
WeedBudz Radio
Knot Plastic
Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/ryzabove)
Contact the host or our team using the form below!

Finding Your Place in Cannabis w/ Heather Sullivan
Welcome back to WeedBudz Radio! We have a very special episode where our host Ry has the opportunity to sit down with the Co-Host of Marijuana Today, and Licensing Manager for Curaleaf, Heather Sullivan! It is always fascinating to hear everyone’s journey that brought them to cannabis. Heather worked at the same company for 13 years, before discovering the job for her was in something she has enjoyed since her 20’s. Speaking about the thought leaders and abundance of companionship in the cannabis space, if you are feeling that you are a square peg in a round hole, much like our host and Heather did, or even if you just want to change directions, do not rule cannabis out. It is a vast and caring community, one that all of us here at WeedBudz are happy to be apart of. Until next time!
Guest:
Heather Sullivan
Curaleaf
Marijuana Today
Host:
Ry Russell
WeedBudz Radio
Knot Plastic
Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/ryzabove)
Contact the host or staff using this form!









