Culture Council: Cannabis Goes Mainstream: Big Brands and Bold Moves to Break Stigmas

March 3, 2025

The 1980s and 1990s produced some of the most popular figures in modern cannabis culture, including Calvin “Snoop Dogg” Broadus, former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson and Heisman Trophy winner Ricky Williams. When Snoop Dogg recalls the time he lit a blunt at the White House or Mike Tyson expanded his cannabis business leading up to his fight with Jake Paul, it’s easy to forget that cannabis culture wasn’t nearly as accepted in traditional media and commercial business when their careers first started. When Tyson won the heavyweight title and Snoop Dogg released his first single, cannabis wasn’t legal in any state, and then-Drug Enforcement Agency Administrator Robert C. Bonner called it a “corruptive influence.” However, as time went on, academics, public health professionals, and others began to push back against the idea that cannabis was a gateway drug doing irreparable damage to society.

“If there’s any evidence that the culture is prepared to be less hysterical about the occasional use of marijuana, it can only be applauded,” sociologist Todd Gitlin told the Los Angeles Times in 1993.

“The hard-and-fast view has been ineffectual. Most kids think it’s ridiculous.”

The kids of 1993 have grown up, discarding the thinking of generations past and accepting cannabis as a part of everyday society. During the 1990s, researchers determined approximately5 percent of the American population used cannabis. By 2023, 15 percent of Americans reportedly used cannabis. Similarly, less than one-third of Americans supported cannabis legalization in the mid-1990s. Nearly a quarter century later, that figure has more than doubled to 70 percent in 2024.

As cannabis use becomes increasingly common and support for legalization grows, there has been a concerted effort to infuse THC into everyday social settings and marketplaces. Green Thumb Industries, a national cannabis company and owner of incredibles and RYTHM Premium Cannabis, has been at the forefront of this movement. In New York, incredibles has worked closely with the world-famous Magnolia Bakery to develop THC chocolate bars. Meanwhile, RYTHM Premium Cannabis has established a content creation partnership with Barstool Sports and launched an annual music festival, The Miracle in Mundelein. Not to mention, RYTHM has also collaborated with musicians like Tinashe, Mitchell Tenpenny, Marcus King and State Champs to curate special strains for its Artist Series.

 

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