Tera
Patrick, adult film star and apparent marijuana enthusiast, smiles coyly out
from the cover of the August 2008 issue of High Times, a “sex, nugs and rock
‘n’ roll special,” with a pile of bud strategically placed in front of her
bikini-clad cleavage.

On this
cover, Patrick epitomizes the archetype that women in weed have pointed to,
again and again, as an example of the sexy, sexist specter they’ve been working
to exorcise for years. In the brave new world of legal cannabis, women are insisting
that their place is in the boardroom or out in the grow, not behind the booth.

The women at the helm of the buzziest new cannabis media entities are no exception — and in their roles as editors, they can set their own agenda for how women are portrayed in cannabis media. In the last three years alone, new publications Miss Grass, Gossamer, MJ Lifestyle, Dope Girls Zine, EstroHaze and Broccoli have launched, boasting women at the top of the masthead.

“It
quickly kind of dawned on us that women really weren’t being properly
represented in the space, and it was really hard for real women to get any
information on cannabis other than, ‘bongs and thongs,’” says Jennifer Skog,
founder and editor in chief at MJ Lifestyle.

Skog says she first noticed this disparity when she began working with cannabis brands as a photographer, and that’s what inspired her to found (and fund) a print magazine of her own. Now, MJ Lifestyle is working on its third issue, which Skog says will focus on movers and shakers in the world of cannabis policy.

“We saw
a clear vision that, wait, we can actually change the perspective of how women
are portrayed in and out of the industry,” she says.

A Targeted Audience

These
female-centric publications want to insert more nuanced portraits of women in
weed: the mother, the entrepreneur, the patient, the educated and elevated
consumer. Over and over again, the women Cannabis Now spoke to talked about
using their platforms to empower women, build a community of women and
illuminate women’s real experiences — goals that are par for the course
for an Allure, a Cosmopolitan or an O Magazine, but are seemingly absent from
previous cannabis media consideration.

Elise
McDonough, who spent 15 years at High Times wearing a variety of hats including
production coordinator, graphic designer and that of the magazine’s first-ever
edibles editor, says there’s a reason for this absence: intended audience.
According to McDonough, High Times cultivated an outlaw-chic brand and sold
best where cannabis laws were harshest. Its targeted audience was underground
growers, who were overwhelmingly male.

A spread from Broccoli Magazine combines cats and cannabis to psychedelic effect. Broccoli is one of many media outlets dedicated to female readers.

“The
reason that many women weren’t involved in the industry when it was illegal was
because they’re primarily the caregivers for their children,” McDonough says.
“If they got locked up or something bad happened to them, it would seriously,
negatively impact their families and that’s a risk a lot of women just can’t
take… In the absence of those kinds of risks, we’re going to see women be able
to thrive [in cannabis] as they do in other industries.”

Now, as legalization takes hold across the United States and around the globe, women are able to engage with cannabis in an unprecedentedly open way, and women-centric publications want to be there to guide them down that path.

“We’re creating sort of
these gateways and onramps to say, ‘Oh, you know, come sit with us!’” says
Stephanie Madewell, an editor at Broccoli Magazine. Founded by former Kinfolk
creative director Anja Charbonneau, Broccoli has been lauded for its design and
written up in Vogue, Broadly, Dazed and the Los Angeles Times. The magazine is
aimed at women and non-binary people looking to explore the world of cannabis —
and beyond.

“I
think one of the ways we really try to do that is by admitting what we don’t
know [about cannabis],” Madewell says. “One of the things we really try to
communicate with our approach is that we’re all in it together, and we’re all
learning and figuring it out and we can all listen to each other. It’s sort of
this group process.”  

A Crowd or a Community?

Though an
abundance of new publications that fit under the same umbrella — women, check,
weed, check — would seem like a detriment in any industry, especially one as
competitive as media, all of the women we spoke to say the space is cozy rather
than crowded.

“I like seeing the stories
other people and other publications are choosing to tell, how they’re choosing
to tell them,” Madewell says. “I don’t feel like there’s some sort of finite
limit on what’s there, because I feel like it’s all shifting and moving so much
there’s kind of room.”

And the
niche is made roomier by the fact that, when you zoom in, it’s easy to
distinguish the different sensibilities of these women-centric cannabis
publications and the women who run them.

EstroHaze, for instance, has a distinctly entrepreneurial tilt, down to its origin story. According to co-founder and chief content officer Safon Floyd, it came into being like so many good things — during a smoke sesh with friends and coworkers Sirita Wright and Kali Wilder,  who she worked with at business publication Black Enterprise.

EstroHaze cofounders from left: Kali Wilder (CEO), Sirita Wright (CMO) and Safon Floyd (CCO).

“It literally happened just that organically, from our jobs inspiring us to smoke, which inspired our entrepreneurial venture,” she says. The online venture began as a podcast, but after an infusion of funding from cannabusiness accelerator Canopy Boulder in 2017,  EstroHaze has grown into “a full-fledged platform” aimed at “multicultural women.”

“We have seen the
necessity for that voice in the space and it’s been empowering and supported
and people seem to love it, so it’s growing,” Floyd says. “I think the
necessity for it all has made it easier for women to kind of kick doors open
and say listen, we’re here and this is what we’re doing, and you can cry about
it if you don’t like it.”

Other publications, particularly those that publish a print magazine, tend to cast a wider net and write about topics adjacent to the cannabis industry. “I don’t think [smoking marijuana is] the most interesting thing about anyone I know,” Gossamer co-founder Verena von Pfetten told Coveteur before the launch of the magazine’s first issue in 2018. “We pick people to feature [who are] the type of person you want to be seated next to at a dinner party, whether you know them or not. Maybe they smoke weed, but not always.”

Broccoli,
which publishes a magazine three times a year, utilizes a small network of
contributors, mostly women and non-binary writers, and looks for people who
want to share longform stories, as opposed to the bite-sized news that occupies
much of the digital realm. In their last issue, they published a piece titled
“To Be a Woman Is To Be In Pain,” in which four writers detailed their
experiences using weed to treat various reproductive conditions — PMS,
polycystic ovarian syndrome, endometriosis and morning sickness. In this way,
Madewell says Broccoli looks to hold a mirror up to life events other
publications have thus far neglected.

“We’ve
heard from so many interesting, thoughtful readers from so many different
places, and so many of them, that’s really their feedback: ‘You know, I haven’t
had anything that felt like it was speaking to me,’” Madewell says. “It feels
like a real privilege to be able to try and do that, and to listen to those
voices and then try to reflect back stories and content and things that amplify
their experiences.”

Fighting the Stigma

One of
biggest hurdles for cannabis in general is the stigma that surrounds the plant,
the aura of criminality and laziness that serves to vilify the plant and its
users. It’s something the women behind and between the pages of these new
cannabis publications still struggle with, especially in the image-conscious
realm of women’s media.

“It was
very hard to actually have women be open to be in the magazine or even be
photographed in any way, shape or form with cannabis,” says Skog, who herself
had previously vowed never to smoke weed on camera. “So many women have been
really closeted for so long, and for us, much like the female cannabis plant,
women have been dealing with being negatively stigmatized all over the world.”

Skog says she has lost former photography clients and faced judgment from members of her non-cannabis community because of her publication, but that she refuses to let that drive her away from the work.

Jennifer Skog, founder and editor in chief of MJ Lifestyle.

“I’m a
soccer mom, I’m coming out of the closet still every day when I’m out with my
kids, talking to parents, and so I think it’s awesome that so many women are
kind of stepping up to the plate and wanting to take this on,” she says.

For
Floyd and EstroHaze, the drive to destigmatize cannabis is two-fold. She says
they work to fight off not only misconceptions about cannabis among women, but
also those held in the black community.

“These aren’t drugs, you know what I mean? We’ve had that narrative so long in the African American community that we’ve kind of succumbed to it,” she says. “We’ve been so hardened by cannabis [prohibition] for so many years and now it’s really an opportunity to snatch our power back, and we’re trying to empower our community to do so.”

I’ll Have What She’s Having

But
despite the air of optimism from women at the frontlines of cannabis media
today, McDonough cautions against celebrating too soon — or buying in too
quickly.

“People definitely want to
promote female-owned companies and draw attention to those responsible
businesses that are empowering not only women but people who have been
disadvantaged by prohibition,” McDonough says. “But then when you look at who’s
getting all the money and who’s getting all the funding, it’s still kind of the
same people.”

She
also says she’s been disappointed to see capitalism’s creep into cannabis
media, a complaint often leveled at more traditional women’s media as well.

“When I
see products targeted towards women that are very stereotypically designed to
be pink or to be covered in jewels, or to be just promoting this kind of
consumerism as a means to your own enlightenment, I think is kind of a false
trap,” McDonough says.

This is not
to say the push for consumerism is limited to women’s cannabis products. But
there’s a fine line between feeling called to build up a special sense of
connectivity and calling it like it is: the people who read and subscribe to a
magazine are audience members, or more bluntly, customers.

By centering the voices of women and non-binary writers and artists, these publications aim to expand the cannabis user paradigm.

And it’s no coincidence that many of these publications offer more than just content. Take Gossamer’s “Dusk” CBD line, the $79 pipe necklaces Miss Grass sells on their website’s “Shop” section or the In Bloom music festival hosted by Broccoli with $275 weekend passes. This isn’t a gotcha moment: It’s a reflection of the modern media landscape, where even the most progressive publications have to sell products to survive.

The latter offering, however, exemplifies a phenomenon McDonough finds promising: events where female cannabis enthusiasts can meet up and enjoy our new, more relaxed legal reality. “It’s not about buying fancy glittery vape pens, it is about finding female friends to smoke with and chill with and build a community, versus just buying products,” she says.

Speaking about In Bloom, Madewell echoed McDonough’s
appreciation of community building.

“One of the things I hope for is that people who are responding
to some quality in the magazine then come to a place and they’re in a room with
other people who are also responding to some quality in the magazine and then
that sense of commonality, it creates a foundation for people to build whatever
they want, whether that’s friendships or connections or whatever may be,” she
says. “It’s sort of a lovely thing to give people the opportunity to grow
communities in that way.”

But whether you’re a woman pushing for equity in the cannabis industry or you just want to know where to buy the cutest rose gold vape pen, the abundance of female-focused cannabis publications reflects and heightens the reality that the role of women in the cannabis industry has been shifting for a long time.

“For all of us women, for us to be having this real culture that we have and really just elevating the space is kind of magical,” Skog says.

Even High Times stopped publishing the titillating magazine covers, long before any of these new entities hit the scene. “[Our] publisher’s attitude always was, we will do this as long as it sells, and when it doesn’t sell, we won’t do it anymore,” McDonough says. “And let’s say like… 2008 to like 2010, you really saw that type of content not sell anymore. They stopped putting sexy women on the cover when it was no longer a successful strategy.”

TELL US, what’s your favorite cannabis publication?

Originally published in Issue 37 of Cannabis Now. LEARN MORE

The post The Future of Cannabis Media Is Female appeared first on Cannabis Now.



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