Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Al Olson

Al Olson is a journalist with nearly 40 years of experience in mainstream print and online media. He has spent the past six years reporting and studying the cannabis industry. Olson began his journalism career working at a handful of daily newspapers in California, including the San Jose Mercury News, where he was part of the team that won a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the Loma Prieta Earthquake in 1989. In 1995, he left the world of print journalism to help the launch of MSNBC.com as one of its founding editors. He spent most of the past 19 years pioneering online journalism at NBC.com, CNBC.com and TODAY.com. In 2014, he was named the first Cannabis Editor for CNBC. "As a young journalist, two of my heroes were Walter Cronkite and Hunter S. Thompson. I admired Cronkite's integrity and Thompson's dramatic flair,” said Olson. “Although these two journalists were on opposite ends of the news spectrum, both understood that the War on Drugs was a colossal failure."

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California Likely To Outlaw Marijuana Edibles Appealing To Children

Last week, California gave its final approval to a piece of legislation, Assembly Bill 350, that would ban edibles that appeal to children.

If You Use Marijuana, The Feds Can Now Take Away Your Unemployment Benefits

The Senate will repeal a rule that limits the ability to deny UE because of random drug testing, you could lose your EU because of marijuana use.

See What Happens When A Rabbi, A Priest And An Atheist Smoke Weed Together

The video has been viewed more than 1.3 million times on YouTube. Not only are people watching it, they are sharing it and talking about it.

What To Know About ‘Synthetic Marijuana’ And How To Spot An Overdose

Synthetic marijuana — the nasty, toxic and confoundingly legal concoction sold in convenience stores across the country — often makes headlines.

Marijuana Myth Busting: Does Holding In Smoke Get You Higher?

Welcome to marijuana myth busting. About Willie Nelson's Jimmy Fallon skit : The punchline was a cloud of smoke. But did he hold in the smoke too long?

Illegal Marijuana Sales Still Top Starbucks and McDonald’s Combined

According to a report from Arcview Market Research, a marijuana market research firm, citizens from the two nations forked out $53.3 billion in 2016.

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