Following Year-Long Ban for Drug Abuse, NBA's Jalen Harris Signs with Knicks
More than a year after he was suspended by the NBA for violating the league's drug abuse policy, guard Jalen Harris has signed with the Knicks.
More than a year after he was suspended by the NBA for violating the league's drug abuse policy, guard Jalen Harris has signed with the Knicks.
After giving the matter of relaxing their THC prohibition some thought since Sha'Carri Richardson's positive drug test in 2021, the World Anti-Doping Agency has decided to keep the ban in place.
Oaksterdam University's 15th anniversary celebration at Fox Theatre on September 24 will feature the premiere of "American Pot Story: Oaksterdam." The documentary stars Richard Lee, who founded the stony school, and his successor Dale Sky Jones, who steals the film.
The "Mike" miniseries on Hulu takes a critical look at boxer Mike Tyson's controversial career. Predictably, the former champ doesn't care for the truthful depiction.
Tommy Chong revealed to CelebStoner this past weekend that he and his partner Cheech Marin will no longer be performing their popular Cheech & Chong stage act after 50-plus years.
TILT Holdings has a heart. They've teamed up with New York's Shinnecock Nation and now Ricky Williams' new cannabis brand, Highsman, which launches in Massachusetts on September 16.
Someone in country music other than Willie Nelson has been arrested for marijuana. On September 12, Alabama bassist and co-founder Teddy Gentry was busted for possession of pot and paraphernalia in Cherokee County on the Alabama-Georgia line.
At a time when corporate interests control the music industry, indie promoter Peter Shapiro is an anomaly. He'd rather do things on his own terms. Shapiro tells all about "putting on 10,000 shows" in his memoir, "The Music Never Stops."
Stony streaming series "Dopesick," "Euphoria" and "Ozark" won 2002 Emmys as well as Judd Apatow and Mike Bonfiglio's "George Carlin's American Dream" and Amy Poehler's "Lucy and Desi" documentaries.
Author, essayist and social critic Barbara Ehrenreich was also a marijuana legalization advocate who remained on NORML's Advisory Board until she died at 81 on September 1 in Virginia after suffering a stroke.