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High Times
American cannabis culture brand founded as a magazine in 1974
American cannabis culture brand founded as a magazine in 1974
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| title | High Times |
| image_file | Hightimes-first-issue-1974.jpg |
| image_size | |
| image_caption | Cover image of the premiere issue of High Times (Summer 1974) featuring model Elizabeth Donoghue. |
| editor | Javier Hasse (July 2025–present) |
| editor_title | Editor-in-Chief |
| previous_editor | |
| category | Recreational drugs |
| frequency | Monthly |
| circulation | 500,000 (1987) |
| circulation_year | 1987 |
| publisher | Trans-High Corporation (1974–2016) |
| Hightimes Holding Corp. (2017–2024) | |
| founder | Tom Forçade |
| founded | |
| firstdate | Summer |
| company | Hightimes Holding Corp. |
| country | United States |
| based | Los Angeles |
| language | English |
| website | |
| issn | 0362-630X |
Hightimes Holding Corp. (2017–2024) High Times is an American cannabis culture brand that first gained success as a monthly magazine.
High Times magazine was published by Trans-High Corporation (THC) from 1974 to 2016. financial difficulties forced the magazine to cease publication in 2024. A new owner purchased High Times assets in 2025.
Overview
High Times covers a wide range of topics, including politics, activism, drugs, education,
Like Playboy, each issue of High Times contains a centerfold photo; however, instead of a nude woman, High Times typically features a cannabis plant. (The magazine, however, often featured women—occasionally crowned as "Ms. High Times"—on the cover to help newsstand sales.) In addition, the magazine "published writers like Hunter S. Thompson, William S. Burroughs, Charles Bukowski, Allen Ginsberg, and Truman Capote."
Publication history
Origins
Forçade's previous attempt—via the Underground Press Syndicate/Alternative Press Syndicate—to reach a wide counterculture audience of underground papers had failed, even though he had the support of several noteworthy writers, photographers, and artists. Through High Times, Forçade was able to get his message to the masses without relying on mainstream media. Forçade was quoted as saying, "Those cavemen must've been stoned, no pun intended."
High Times was originally meant to be a joke: a single-issue lampoon of Playboy, substituting marijuana for sex. and Cindy Ornsteen a.k.a. Anastasia Sirocco.
The first issue, 50 pages in total, with the tagline, "The Magazine of High Society," appeared in the summer of 1974. Advertising for the first issue had been pre-sold at that year's National Fashion and Boutique Show. "High Times #1 made its debut at the June 1974 show and was an instant success, selling out its first run of 10,000 copies and getting reprinted twice."
The magazine's first editor was Ed Dwyer, who had earlier written the text of the Woodstock music festival program booklet (as well as the Woodstock film program booklet). The magazine was initially distributed by Homestead Book Company and Big Rapids Distribution.
High Times was at the beginning funded by drug money from the sale of illegal marijuana, But the magazine found an audience, becoming a monthly publication with a growing circulation, and the staff quickly grew to 40 people. Marijuana hydroponics growers were a large part of the magazine's advertiser base.
Financial struggles and legal battles
High Times founder Forçade committed suicide in November 1978. He bequeathed trusts to benefit High Times and the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). (Forçade had been a supporter of NORML since the organization's founding in 1970.)
Following Forçade's death, the magazine was controlled by "mostly by Forçade’s relatives" and lawyer Michael John Kennedy.
Under the editorship of Larry Sloman (from 1979 to 1984), the magazine consistently struggled against marijuana prohibition laws, and fought to keep itself alive and publishing in an anti-cannabis atmosphere. Reflecting the time period, High Times began to feature positive coverage of cocaine as a recreational drug.
The magazine's former associate publisher, Rick Cusick, said the only way High Times managed to stay in business and never miss a publication date for over four decades was, "Really, really good lawyers, even though everybody knew I was talking about just one—Michael Kennedy." Kennedy served as the general counsel and chairman of the board for High Times for over 40 years until his death in 2016, when his wife and board member, Eleanora Kennedy, took the reins.
Mainstream success and the Hager era
In 1987, High Times was audited by the Audit Bureau of Circulation as reaching 500,000 copies an issue, rivaling Rolling Stone and National Lampoon.
In 1988, Steven Hager was hired as the magazine's editor. He changed the focus from the promotion of hard drugs (e.g., cocaine and heroin), and instead concentrated on advocating personal cultivation of cannabis. Hager became the first editor to publish and promote the work of hemp activist Jack Herer.
In 1988, under Hager's leadership, the magazine created the Cannabis Cup, a cannabis awards ceremony held every Thanksgiving in Amsterdam that later expanded to a number of U.S. cities. He also formed the High Times Freedom Fighters, the first hemp legalization group. The High Times Freedom Fighters were famous for dressing up in Colonial outfits and organizing hemp rallies across the United States. One rally, the Boston Freedom Rally, quickly became the largest marijuana-related political event in the country, drawing an audience of over 30,00 to the Boston Common in 2013.
The magazine advocated for the widespread use of hemp in the 1990s, publishing a quarterly magazine called Hemp Times and operating a retail location in Manhattan called Planet Hemp.
In 1991, the magazine began featuring celebrities on the cover of the magazine. Over the years, these included Cypress Hill, The Black Crowes, Ziggy Marley, Beavis and Butt-Head, Milla Jovovich, Ice Cube, Wu-Tang Clan, George Carlin, Ozzy Osbourne, Kevin Smith, Frances McDormand, Pauly Shore, Sacha Baron Cohen, Willie Nelson, Woody Harrelson, and Snoop Dogg.
In 1997, the magazine and Hager founded the Counterculture Hall of Fame, with inductions held annually on Thanksgiving as part of the Amsterdam Cannabis Cup event.
In the late 1980s Mike Edison began writing "Shoot the Tube," a featured column about television and politics for High Times. In 1998 Edison was named the magazine's publisher, and later took control of the editorial side of the magazine as well. As editor and publisher, he caused a furor among staffers by putting Black Sabbath singer Ozzy Osbourne on the cover, and then leaking to the New York Posts Page Six gossip column that thousands of dollars of pot had gone missing from the photo shoot. In November 1999, the magainze held a 25th Anniversary party at Irving Plaza, with performances by Cypress Hill. After taking the magazine to new heights in sales and advertising, Edison was instrumental in producing High Times first feature film, High Times' Potluck. Edison left High Times in 2001.
In 2000, the magazine established the Stony Awards to recognize and celebrate notable stoner films and television episodes about cannabis. Six High Times Stony Awards ceremonies were held in New York City beginning in 2000, before the Stonys moved to Los Angeles in 2007. Award winners received a bong-shaped trophy. Starting in 2002, the Stonys presented the Thomas King Forçade Award for "stony achievement" in film.
Later developments
In 2003, Steven Hager was fired, and High Times' board of directors shifted the magazine's focus from marijuana to more literary content, hiring John Buffalo Mailer as executive editor. As a result, the magazine "lost a third of the circulation in nine months."
In 2004, High Times returned to its roots, releasing the CD High Volume: The Stoner Rock Collection. Hager was rehired, first as the creative director, and then in 2006, back to the position of editor-in-chief,
In November 2009, High Times celebrated its 35th anniversary.
In the period 2010–2013, the magazine put out a standalone publication that advocated for medical marijuana.
Hager was again let go by the magazine in 2013, eventually successfully suing High Times for defrauding him of his ownership shares in the company. Hager subsequently released a 20-part series on YouTube, titled The Strategic Meeting, showing the internal machinations inside the company. The video series asserts that Michael Kennedy stole the company from the rightful employees and subverted the original mission for his own private gain.
In October 2014, the magazine celebrated its 40th anniversary with a party attended by celebrities such as Susan Sarandon. In 2014, the High Times website was read by 500,000 to five million users each month.
Relocation and sale
With the legalization of marijuana in several West Coast states, including California, the magazine announced in January 2017 that it would permanently relocate from New York to Los Angeles.
In the summer of 2017, High Times was sold to a group of investors led by Adam Levin to $70 million.
High Times acquired cannabis media company Green Rush Daily, Inc. on April 5, 2018. The deal was valued at $6.9 million. Green Rush Daily founder Scott McGovern joined the magazine as senior executive vice president. Financial difficulties forced the magazine to cease publication in 2024.
Josh Kesselman, founder of RAW, bought the publication for $3.5 million in June 2025, relaunching the podcast as High Times with Josh Kesselman in September.
Columns
- "Almost Infamous" by Bobby Black (2004–2016)—lifestyle and entertainment
- “Ask Ed: Your Marijuana Questions Answered" by Ed Rosenthal (1980s–1990s)
- "Brain Damage Report" by Paul Krassner (late 1970s–2000s)
- "Cannabis Column" by Jon Gettman
- "Chef Ra's Psychedelic Kitchen" by Chef Ra ( 1988– 2003)
- "Sex Pot" by Hyapatia Lee (from 2013)
- "The Stoned Gamer" by Alana Evans (from 2014)—gaming
- "Toasted Tweets" by Jessica Delfino (2016)—weekly cannabis-themed Twitter round-up
- "The Stone Cold Cop List" by Jon Cappetta (2020) - monthly collection of newly released products
Comics
By 1976, High Times was publishing comics in its pages, by the likes of underground comix creators such as Gilbert Shelton ("The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers"), Kim Deitch, Josh Alan and Drew Friedman, Bill Griffith ("Zippy the Pinhead"), Paul Kirchner ("Dope Rider"), Milton Knight ("Zoe"), Spain Rodriguez ("Trashman"), Dave Sheridan, Frank Thorne, and Skip Williamson ("Snappy Sammy Smoot"). Later, artists like Bob Fingerman and Mary Wilshire contributed comics to High Times as well.
Notable contributors and staff members
Andrew Weil was a regular contributor to High Times from 1975 to 1983. For a time, William Levy served as the magazine's European editor.
In 1976, Bruce Eisner became a contributing editor for the magazine. Chip Berlet was the magazine's Washington, D.C. bureau chief in the Seventies. Jeff Goldberg was an editor in 1978–1979.
Kyle Kushman is a former cultivation reporter for High Times and has been a contributing writer for over 20 years.
Bobby Black had a long association with High Times, from 1994 to 2015, including being a senior editor and columnist. His involvement at High Times included production director and associate art director; writing the monthly lifestyle and entertainment column "Almost Infamous"; writing feature articles and interviews; creator and producer of the magazine's annual Miss High Times beauty pageant; lead reporter, judge, and competition coordinator for the Cannabis Cup and the High Times Medical Cannabis Cup; and A&R, producer, liner notes and art director for High Volume: The Stoner Rock Collection CD (High Times Records).
At age 19, Zena Tsarfin started as an intern for the magazine. She later returned to High Times, serving as the magazine's managing editor until 2001 and then again from March 2006 to January 2007. From 2014 to 2016, Tsarfin was High Times' director of digital media.
Danny Danko is the magazine's former Senior Cultivation Editor.
The careers of a number of writers/editors from the comics industry overlapped with High Times, including Tsarfin, Josh Alan Friedman (High Times managing editor, 1983), Lou Stathis (High Times editor, late 1980s), Ann Nocenti (High Times editor, 2004), and most significantly, John Holmstrom, who began to work for the magazine as managing editor in 1987, was soon promoted to executive editor, and in 1991 was promoted to publisher and president. In 1996 he stepped aside to launch and oversee the High Times website, and left the magazine for good in 2000.
Andrew James Parker, a.k.a. Chewberto420, is a cannabis photographer and author, based out of the Western United States (predominantly Huntington Beach, California and Pagosa Springs, Colorado), who has made contributions to the magazine since 2016. Parker is known for his images based in macro photography. He discovered naturally occurring purple hash through experimentation with anthocyanins within cannabis.
Book publishing

- {{cite book
- {{cite book | author-link = Danny Danko
- {{cite book | author-link =
- {{cite book | author-link = Stephen Gaskin | editor-link=Steven Hager | editor-first= Steven | editor-last = Hager
- {{cite book | author-link = Paul Krassner | editor-link=Steven Hager | editor-first= Steven | editor-last = Hager | url-access = registration
- {{cite book | author-link =
Notes
References
- (5 April 2019). "A Conversation with Larry "Ratso" Sloman". Magnet magazine.
- Danko, Danny. (January 6, 2005). "Norml Founder Retires – Exhale Stage Left". HighTimes.com.
- (2023-11-08). "Hightimes Holding Corp". [[Bloomberg L.P..
- (2023-11-08). "Investor Relations". Hightimes Holding Corp..
- Casacchia, Chris. (2024-05-08). "Bidders circling receivership assets of marijuana brand High Times".
- Lazaroff, Leon. (2017-06-02). "New owner of 'High Times' sees a business ready to be fully baked". The Street.
- (2017-06-02). "High Price Paid for High Times". [[CNN]].
- Cotts, Cynthia. (1999-10-26). "Our Buds, Ourselves". Village Voice.
- Stroup, Keith. (October 9, 2009). "NORMLizer – Here's to HIGH TIMES!". High Times.
- Krassner, Paul. (October 1, 2009). "Brain Damage Control: Tom Forçade: Prisoner of Romance". High Times.
- Williams, Alex. (2016-04-02). "High Times Wants to Be the Playboy of Pot". The New York Times.
- Abrahamian, Atossa Araxia. (October 30, 2013). "Baking Bad: A Potted History of 'High Times': The editors of the nation's most popular pot magazine on its four decades-long fight to end cannabis prohibition". [[The Nation]].
- Rosenkranz, Patrick. (January 25, 2013). "'Totally Righteous' Lower East Side Cartoonist Dies: Alan Shenker AKA Yossarian, March 3, 1945-January 14, 2013". [[The Comics Journal]].
- Weiner, Rex. (9 October 2014). "6 1/2 Things You Didn't Know About High Times". High Times.
- Dwyer, Ed. (August 5, 2019). "By the Time I Got to Woodstock: The author of the Woodstock festival's program book recalls one helluva wild ride". The Saturday Evening Post.
- (2003-06-09). "Homestead Book Company". Homesteadbook.com.
- Romero, Dennis. (2017-01-18). "High Times Is Moving to Los Angeles". L.A. Weekly.
- Torgoff, Martin. (2004). "Can't Find My Way Home: America in the Great Stoned Age, 1945–2000". [[Simon & Schuster]].
- Clayton Patterson. (2007). "Resistance: A Radical Political and Social History of the Lower East Side". [[Seven Stories Press]].
- (July 9, 2020). "High Times Greats: Larry 'Ratso' Sloman: A rare interview with author, comedian, Yippie warrior and former editor-in-chief of High Times".
- Simunek, Chris. (2016-01-26). "Requiem For a Dragonslayer, Michael Kennedy, 1937-2016".
- Greene, Bob. (1987-03-30). "What to read if you just don't say 'no'". [[Chicago Tribune]].
- Cizmar, Martin. [https://www.wweek.com/potlander/2017/04/18/the-story-of-one-of-the-greatest-cannabis-advocates-who-ever-lived-and-the-strain-that-bears-his-name/ "The Story of One of the Greatest Cannabis Advocates Who Ever Lived and the Strain That Bears His Name: With the closure of Third Eye, the Potlander wanted to revisit the life of Jack Herer,"] {{Webarchive. link. (2022-12-24 ''[[Willamette Week]]'' (April 18, 2017).)
- Bloom, Steve. (July 7, 2017). "Celebrities on the Cover of High Times". CelebStoner.
- (January 26, 1999). "Drug-Addled Rock Star Pilfers Pot, Chaos Reigns at Stoner Photo Shoot". New York Post.
- (October 27, 1999). "Press Clips". The Village Voice.
- (October 5, 2003). "Dropout Produces Pot Film". [[Washington Square News]].
- (September 29, 2008). "James Franco, Weeds Among ''High Times'' Stony Award Winners". OpenGate Capital.
- Vizzini, Ned. (March 5, 2002). "Scissorfight; Franzese's Bully Party; Stony Awards; More Shopping and Fucking". [[New York Press]].
- Stevenson, Seth. (July 26, 2021). "For High Times, Weed Legalization Is a Mixed Bag: The magazine was a countercultural icon. Its new owners want to make it a name brand". Slate.
- Leland, John. (Nov 16, 2003). "Who's Smoking Now?". The New York Times.
- McKinley, Jesse. (April 19, 2009). "Marijuana Advocates Point to Signs of Change". The New York Times.
- Krassner, Paul. (October 1, 2009). "Tom Forçade: Prisoner of Romance". HighTimes.com.
- Russell, Josh. (January 10, 2018). "Longtime ''High Times'' Editor Sues Magazine Over Ouster: The former editor of ''High Times'' magazine claims in court that he was defrauded of his shares in the counter-culture monthly". [[Courthouse News Service]].
- Hager, Steven. (Nov 11, 2022). "The Strategic Meeting". YouTube.
- Coscarelli, Joe. [https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2014/10/high-times-hits-middle-age.html "WEED-STAINED WRETCHES: High Times Hits Middle Age: How the Marijuana Magazine Stays Relevant,"] {{Webarchive. link. (2022-12-24 ''New York'' (Oct. 17, 2014).)
- Flamm, Matthew. (January 12, 2017). "High Times magazine is leaving New York for Los Angeles". Crain's New York Business.
- (4 April 2018). "High Times Acquires Green Rush for Estimated $6.9M | Los Angeles Business Journal".
- Borchardt, Debra. (5 April 2018). "High Times Acquires Green Rush Daily in All Stock Deal".
- Lindner, Emmett. (2025-06-18). "New Owner for High Times Magazine Bets on a Counterculture Comeback". The New York Times.
- (October 9, 2025). "Josh Kesselman, RAW Founder, Launches High Times Podcast".
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20111101230539/http://hightimes.com/tags/almost_infamous "Almost Infamous,"] High Times website. Retrieved Dec. 23, 2022.
- (February 5, 2007 }}. [[San Francisco Chronicle]]. 2002-02-25. Retrieved on 2007-08-11. ({{cite web). "Article Not Found!".
- Gettman, Jon. (2002-09-05). "The Coalition for Rescheduling Cannabis.". High Times.
- Hager, Steve. (2006-12-26). "RIP James 'Chef Ra' Wilson". High Times.
- (2013-03-29). "5 Questions for Hyapatia Lee".
- Warren, Peter. (March 10, 2014). "Alana Evans Scores Gaming Column for 'High Times'".
- Gray, Lila. (March 10, 2014). "Alana Evans Lands Column in High Times Magazine". [[XBIZ]].
- "Searching for cop list | High Times Magazine".
- "High Times Magazine, Trans-High Corporation, 1974 Series". Grand Comics Database.
- Simunek, Chris. (September 8, 2003). "Grow: Interview, Dr. Andrew Weil". High Times.
- WSJ Staff. (Sep 20, 2009). "Fortune, New York, Other Publications Are Wild For Weed Stories; a High Times Editor Offers Pointers". wsj.com.
- Staff. (July 14, 2008). "Ever get Hauled into Jail for Smoking Pot?". [[New York (magazine).
- Klare, Joe. (7 June 2016). "The High Times of a Pot Journalist: An Interview with Bobby Black". The Marijuana Times.
- chicpeajc. (2014-10-03). "Bobby Black".
- Green, Joshua. (Apr 27, 2011). "The 'High Times' 2012 Presidential Straw Poll". TheAtlantic.com.
- Cowan, Darren. (March 20, 2009). "2009 High Times Doobie Awards". blistering.com.
- Fresh, Mikey. (February 18, 2010). "Eminem, Kid Cudi, Asher Roth Up For Doobie Awards". theboombox.com.
- D'Angelo, Joe. (Jan 9, 2002). "High Times Records: The Greenest Label In The Biz Marijuana-friendly magazine's label plans to drop first release, THC (The Hip-Hop Collection) Vol. 1, April 16". mtv.com.
- (29 Feb 2012). "Girls Don't Like Metal Interviews Zena Tsarfin". Canada Arts Connect.
- "Andrew Parker aka Chewberto420".
- (22 August 2016). "So You Want to Learn How to Make Purple Dabs, Do You?".
- (15 March 2016). "Cannabis & Anthocyanins: A Closer Look at the Color Purple in Cannabis".
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