Posted in: Podcast Season 3

EP 38: High Stakes and Joint Efforts: Nothing to Mezz With — With Paul Saunders, Mezz Co-Founder

Contrary to popular belief, the cannabis industry is not over-saturated , there are plenty of opportunities to participate, and you don’t need to consume the plant to jump in the business! Tune in to hear Paul Saunders, brand strategist, investor, and co-founder of Mezz, discuss how he successfully builds brands, thriving in the budding (pun intended) cannabis industry (and why it’s just the tip of the iceberg!), his world travels, how he told his Caribbean parents he was entering the weed business lol, and much more!

Posted in: Podcast Season 2

EP 25: Flower to the People: The Blunt Truth — With Tucky Blunt, Co-Owner, Blunts + Moore, World’s 1st Social Equity-Owned Cannabis Dispensary

As the legal cannabis industry has expanded across the US over the past decade, green is the most prominent color seen in this space. In addition to the color of the flower, sales are projected exceed $30 billion in the US by 2023 and legal cannabis is said to support over 240,000 American jobs.

The colors that aren’t seen as frequently in the industry are black and brown. In an attempt to counter this history of disparity, many states and cities have implemented social equity programs in connection to the legalization of medical or adult cannabis use. Tune in as Tucky Blunt discusses navigating the cannabis business, the importance of education and networking within the industry, and his big plans for the future (hint hint: Forbes cover)!

Posted in: Podcast Season 2

EP 16: Breaking The Grass Ceiling Bud Naked: Cannabis Social Equity — With Madison Shockley III, SEOWA Co-Founder and Entrepreneur

Many of us may recognize my next guest, Madison Shockley III, from his role as Fred on “The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl”. The viral web series challenged the archetypes generally available for Black people in entertainment, especially women, who are often cast as sassy, power hungry, angry or motherly figures — sometimes a combination of them all — but rarely awkward.

What most of us may not know is that, through his organization SEOWA (Social Equity Owners and Workers Association), this actor-turned-cannabis entrepreneur, is at the forefront of activism pertaining to LA’s Social Equity Program (SEP). Cannabis criminalization and its enforcement has had long-term, adverse impacts on Los Angeles, particularly for low income and minority communities.  The SEP is one tool LA is using to begin to acknowledge and repair the harm caused by the War on Drugs and the disparate enforcement of cannabis prohibition.