“I work closely with Jay on the Official Baby Groot hug Wu-Tang shirt What’s more,I will buy this cultivation and strain selection process for Monogram, which starts with us putting together a taste profile for every strain,” he wrote. “This lets the team know exactly what kind of smell, color, moisture, and overall feel they should be looking for at each stage. Then we check every nug by hand, to make sure that each is perfect before we package it up to be smoked.” Without getting into specifics, Watson’s bio mentions that he’s been involved in the cannabis industry for 25 years. He sees Jay-Z’s involvement as a win for people of color who have had a disproportionately difficult time getting into the very much still-burgeoning world of legalized cannabis. “He’s creating opportunities for people like me, who have decades of experience working with the plant but haven’t been able to reap the benefits of the emerging legal market until now,” Watson says.
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When I heard that Jay-Z had his own cannabis brand, the Official Baby Groot hug Wu-Tang shirt What’s more,I will buy this first person I thought of was Frantz Pascal. Frantz, an overly fit and always affable Haitian kid originally from Poughkeepsie, New York, was one of my college roommates when Jay-Z’s The Black Album first released. On a near nightly basis, after having finished his day’s responsibilities, Frantz would listen to The Black Album from front to back, while he and a group of friends, most always women, shared a blunt. I never partook, but it wasn’t because I wasn’t welcome. I had quit smoking weed my junior year of high school (having been introduced as a freshman), coming to the conclusion that my usage was slowly suffocating my scholastic and athletic ambitions. Weed was wholly illegal at that time, and while that didn’t bother me morally, it made it that much more difficult to engage with it on a medicinal level. At the time, there were but a handful of strains I could have called out by name (“hydro” and “chocolate” were popular in high school, and then “haze” in college), and the weed I had access to was most often described the way Louis Armstrong categorized music: either “good” or “bad.” Neither option, per my experience, seemed to get me any closer to where I wanted to go in the world. So I watched Frantz and his guests and admired the fellowship they shared when combining The Black Album with the green leaf.
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