Thursday, December 25, 2025
Home Blog Page 1149

Why Did Los Angeles Paint Its Streets White This Summer?

Here is something I’ve noticed living in Texas this summer: It’s really, really hot. In fact, the whole country has been experiencing record heat temperatures this summer, with Northwest havens like Portland reaching 109 degrees.

No state has been feeling the heat more than California, though. Multiple areas of the state have reached record highs this summer, and some scientists believe the temperatures are a result of climate change.

Wherever you politically stand on the issue, Los Angeles isn’t taking chances anymore. LA Mayor Eric Garcetti intends to reduce the average temperature of the city by 3 degrees Fahrenheit over the next 20 years.

See cities, particularly a sprawling metropolis like Los Angeles, can experience what’s called urban heat island. Due to the increased human activity packed tightly together, it tends to raise the overall temperature of a city. Things like large skyscrapers, reduced air flow from packed-in infrastructure, asphalt streets, and just more mouth-breathers play a factor. An easy way to think about it is the difference you feel wearing black jeans vs. khaki shorts on a hot day.

Cities therefore can be up to five degrees F hotter than its surrounding rural areas and on scorching summer days, that heat could prove lethal.

So Los Angeles is painting its streets in a gray-colored coating called CoolSeal. The paint reflects sun rays, and was originally used to keep spy planes cool while they rest on the tarmac. That way the spy plans don’t give off heat once again in the air, as satellite-mounted infrared cameras could otherwise detect them.

“We found that on average the area covered in CoolSeal is 10 degrees cooler than black asphalt on the same parking lot,” a city official told the Washington Post. “We thought it was really interesting. It’s almost like treated asphalt warms at a lower rate.”

City officials also stated that Los Angeles is the first city to make such an initiative. The cooled streets will also help Los Angeles residents with air conditioning bills that can skyrocket in the summer. However, the city intends to do much more to battle climate change moving forward.

“This is an urgent challenge, and it’s much bigger than one person,” Mayor Garcetti announced in a recent statement. “Climate change is a fact of life that people in Los Angeles and cities around the world live with every day.”

Netflix Introduces Binge Watching Mode So You Can Never Leave The House Again

0

It took Netflix a couple of years to really discover what they were meant to do. Once they uncovered the goldmine that is online streaming, they changed TV forever, including the way it’s made and consumed, leading to the creation of terms that we use and hear in our day to day lives like binge-watching. Seriously, it’s in the dictionary. 

During Netflix’s Hack Day, a yearly event where their employees present fresh ideas, the company discussed and introduced their latest binge-watching feature, which allows you to keep track of your shows and to see how much time it’ll take for you to complete the entirety of it, or maybe just a couple of seasons.

This feature is meant to help you organize your day and to make time for what’s truly important, which is watching even more TV. The down side of it is that it’ll also tell you how much time you’ve spent in front of a screen, binge watching like there’s no tomorrow. It’s not fun when Netflix tells you that you haven’t left your apartment for a couple of days. 

The binge mode feature will display timeline bars for their different shows, tracking your progress through the series, showing you all you’ve been through and how much you have left. This all sounds great for people who love to organize and manage their time, just remember to turn binge mode off when you have guests over. You don’t really want them to know how much time you spend on Netflix.

What You Need To Know: The Current Cannabis Concentrates Market

As the legal cannabis market continues to grow and mature it brings with it new business trends and opportunities—no division of the cannabis-based products segment has experienced the sort of developments seen with marijuana concentrates. Looking at the U.S. cannabis industry as a whole, there are literally countless new businesses springing up offering oils, waxes, distillates, crumble, edibles, vaporizers, dab equipment, and extraction machines. There are a number or reasons for this expansive infusion of start-up companies into the market, but they mostly have to do with technological advancements and convenience.

Legal marijuana markets, whether medical or recreational, have opened the doors for tech companies to comfortably invest time and energy in the cannabis space. The confluence of modern cannabis culture and the tech industries has spawned a number of innovative technologies related to marijuana extracts. Not only have these innovations given rise to healthier, more regulated products like solvent free extracts, they have also lead to sheik, convenient “smoking” methods seen with today’s vape pens. These vape pens, generally used with concentrates, are easily utilized in public spaces and within homes without the nuisance of excessive smoke. Furthermore, with less product required to burn in order to achieve a healthy buzz, modern cannabis aficionados are turning to the vape pen and concentrate combination as the staple of their marijuana consumption.

It should be noted also that “dabbing” has become a massive trend in current marijuana culture—in this practice smokers use complex glass water pipes to take “bong-like” hits of cannabis concentrates. Dabbing is not for the novice marijuana consumer.

To gain some more insight into the current concentrates market, The Fresh Toast contacted Head Set, a frontrunner in marijuana business analysis and statistics. Head Set used the Washington State marketplace as a sample population for this study. Here is what they found:

Overview

Head Set’s findings represent data collected from POS systems in cannabis dispensaries around Washington State. However, they admit that these systems are not without error, concerning both human and mechanical data input and interpretation. Furthermore, this study wholly neglects any information concerning black market cannabis demographics and consumption. Nonetheless, both legal and black market marijuana consumerism often follow similar paths in both trends and pricing.

Total Market Share

A July 2017 sampling by Head Set appropriates the cannabis marketplace into several categories: flower, concentrates, pre-roll, vape pens, edible, beverage, tincture & sublingual, capsules, and topical. In these findings, flowers hold the market share with 57.9% of all sales while concentrates demand 11.7%. However, this findings are a bit misleading concerning concentrates as vape pens, edibles, beverages, tinctures, capsule, sublinguals, and topicals more often than not contain concentrates themselves. With this notion in mind, the actual amount of concentrates being purchased at dispensaries in WA State probably demands something closer to 30% of all sales. Moreover, in States where marijuana is still completely illegal the consumption of concentrate products is experiencing exponential growth, as the use of these cannabis products is generally far more discreet than traditional smoking methods.

Concentrates Market Trends

Perhaps the most informative element of Head Set’s findings is contained within the 11.7% of the market which they have dubbed as concentrates. This subsection presents specific forms of raw concentrates (not contained in other products) sold over the counter at dispensaries—highlighting the consumerist nuances of this sub-culture within a sub-culture. Head Set’s findings show that wax is the market leader with 60% of sales with shatter following in second with 12%. Following behind these two market staples are more novel forms of concentrates which are gaining in popularity like live resin, rosin, distillates, and RSO/WPE.

As far as market growth is concerned, the RSO/WPE category far exceeds any other form of concentrates with 768.7% spike in sales in the last year. Head Set attributes this growth to recent legalization of both products. RSO stands for Rick Simpson Oil while RSE is short for Whole Plant Extracts.

Sources

Kent Gruetzmacher M.F.A. is a Colorado based freelance writer and the Director of Business Development at Mac & Fulton Talent Partners (www.mandfconsultants.com), a recruiting firm dedicated to the indoor gardening and cannabis space. He is interested in utilizing his M.A. in the Humanities to critically explore the many cultural and business facets of this youthful, emergent industry by way of his entrepreneurial projects.

Gossip: Deceased Mobster’s Tell-All Reveals Tom Cruise’s Alleged Sexuality; Prince William: ‘George Rules The Roost’

Johnny Fratto is the man in question. Fratto, before his 2015 death, was a con artist, jewel thief, art forger, and mobster who found his way into the upper crust of Hollywood.

While he may not have been a household name, he crossed paths with celebs like Oprah Winfrey, Frank Sinatra, Paris Hilton, Howard Stern, and more. And, one of those more was Tom Cruise.

Cruise was preparing for his role in the 1986 movie The Color of Money, and approached Fratto to get a better understanding of how to act as a mobster.

“Cruise took a liking to me . . . maybe he got off on my real-life stories of hustling in the underworld that made his script look dry and uninspired by comparison,” Fratto stated in his biography.

Speaking of, many years after that event, and after Fratto’s death, a biography of his life is being published called Now That I’m Dead, Here’s the Real Dirt.

The book is being written by Mafia historian Matthew Randazzo V, but the sentiments are supposed to be authentically Fratto’s. That includes Fratto’s words on Cruise.

In the book Fratto states, “Despite what rumors you’ve heard, I can vouch from firsthand experience that Tom Cruise is not a homosexual.”

He goes further to explain that he went out one night with the man and witnessed Cruise hit on multiple women and specifically, “two smoking hot party girls from Des Moines.”

The excerpt from the book goes:

“‘What’s going on, ladies?’ he asked with that mischievous superstar smile that made that f ***er millions of dollars . . . I had never seen women actually swoon in real life . . . these b****** swooned.”

“If there was anything gay about Tom Cruise, I sure as f*** didn’t see it, and neither did the girls from Des Moines,” Fratto said.

Prince William: ‘George Rules The Roost’

When he was taking a tour of a hospital yesterday, he talked briefly about his children:

“George rules the roost and Charlotte isn’t far behind,” William laughed. However, he’s not quite sure he’s ready to see her grow up so fast. “I think she’s going to be trouble when she’s older,” William admitted. “All fathers say that.”

As for George, the four-year-old started school at Thomas’s Battersea in the London borough of Wandsworth last week. Though the toddler appeared a bit nervous in the photos taken of him heading onto campus for the first time, William assured it was all the parents getting emotional.

“Most of the parents are in floods of tears,” he joked. “And the children are absolutely fine!”

William said George has been adjusting to student life quite well — so far.

“We are all seeing how long that lasts before he doesn’t want to go!” he told hospital patients. “George has been really easy. He hasn’t said, ‘Have I got to do this for the rest of my life?’ ”
[From E! News]

Love the fresh dirt we bring over daily from Naughty Gossip? Let us know in the comments!

Finding Middle Ground In The National Marijuana Debate

Americans rarely rank “culture war” issues among their top priorities, but these issues nonetheless play an outsized role in determining how people view their leaders. For many voters, a politician’s positions and statements on social issues are a gut check, indicating whether a policymaker generally shares their values, perspective, and approach to American society and the world.

This manual looks at the mindset of Americans in the middle on:

  1. Abortion and Contraception
  2. Immigration
  3. Religious Liberty and LGBT Non-Discrimination
  4. Guns
  5. Marijuana

For each of the five topics, Third Way explains how the middle approaches the issue using public opinion data, describe how to talk about it in ways that find common ground and resonate with the values of Americans in the middle, and recommend how to talk about a handful of specific legislative proposals.

What The Middle Thinks

The views of the middle on marijuana are nuanced and complicated. According to a recent Quinnipiac poll, 59 percent of American voters support legalizing marijuana broadly, while 36 percent oppose it. Some polls have found even higher levels of support, reaching into the 60s. However, this steadily rising number disguises a more complicated reality. Ninety-three percent of voters support legalizing medical marijuana, meaning that a third of them — 34 percent — support marijuana use for medical purposes without supporting broader legalization. The voters who fill this space between blanket legalization and total prohibition form what we call the “marijuana middle.” Based on our public opinion polling, this group skews towards white women, people ages 50 and over, and self-identified moderates or conservatives.  

Despite its torn views on legalization itself, the marijuana middle is quite clear in its belief that the current conflict between state laws that legalize marijuana and federal laws that prohibit it is untenable — and that Congress has a responsibility to fix it. In our polling, 67 percent of voters said Congress should pass a bill giving states that have legalized marijuana a safe haven from federal marijuana laws, so long as they have a strong regulatory system. Even almost a quarter of those voters who oppose legalizing marijuana for recreational use support a safe haven policy that would let states act within federal guidelines. When given an option of state or federal control, a clear majority of the electorate believes states should control and decide whether to legalize marijuana (60 percent state control compared to 34 percent federal government enforcement). And a full 71 percent of Americans — including majorities of every single demographic group — oppose the federal government going into states that have chosen to legalize marijuana for medical or recreational purposes to enforce the federal ban. Americans — in particular the marijuana middle — recognize that the current system doesn’t work, and they responded in our polling not with ideological proclamations but by supporting a middle-ground, commonsense safe haven policy that would ease that conflict as the legal landscape continues to quickly shift.

How To Appeal To The Middle

The best way to frame marijuana discussions to appeal to the marijuana middle is to allow states to be responsible actors within set federal guardrails. Because of the federal prohibition on marijuana, states’ efforts to effectively regulate their markets are severely hampered and their ability to be responsible regulators is curtailed by fears of federal preemption lawsuits. However, not all state legalization laws are equally effective, which is why we also need to maintain federal guardrails that steer states towards protecting federal interests, like keeping roads and kids drug-free.

Additionally, when talking to the middle it is critically important to distinguish marijuana from other drugs — not lump them together. While talking about the failure of the drug war may be effective with young white men and some Independents, it does not speak to the marijuana middle. Another common mistake is an over-reliance on the popularity of medical marijuana. Though there is overwhelming support for its legalization, it is only a place to start the conversation — focusing on medical marijuana alone does not necessarily lead the marijuana middle towards support for full legalization. Instead, talking only about medical marijuana cries out for a targeted, medical-only solution, one that fails to resolve the conflicts on the ground being experienced by the eight states (and D.C.) that have already legalized recreational marijuana. Instead, voters in the middle respond to the idea that the pragmatic choice is to give states that are acting responsibly the ability to effectively regulate both medical and recreational marijuana where voters have decided one or both should be legal—and to crack down on states that are legalizing marijuana in irresponsible ways.

Advice For Talking About Specific Legislative Proposals

Speaking to the middle about federal enforcement in states that have legalized:

  • Ninety-eight percent of Americans live in a state that has legalized some form of marijuana — but all of those laws are in violation of the federal ban. That means every cancer patient using medical marijuana, business owner operating a dispensary, or banker providing financial services for a marijuana company is at risk of federal prosecution, fines, and jail time even though they are following the laws in their state.
  • Congress has already spoken on this issue — by directly prohibiting the Administration from enforcing the federal ban in states that have legalized medical marijuana. First passed in 2014, Congress has included a policy rider in every federal appropriations bill since that ties the hands of the Drug Enforcement Administration so that states can enact effective regulatory systems. That rider has now passed the Republican-controlled House Floor and Senate Appropriations Committee several times, every time with growing bipartisan support. And if House Leadership would allow a vote, it would easily be extended to also cover recreational marijuana states.
  • If states are going to be laboratories of democracy when it comes to marijuana legalization, we have to give them the space to effectively regulate their markets without the threat of the Drug Enforcement Administration airdropping in. That sort of threat not only incentivizes hands-off regulations, it also scares away the banks and legitimate entrepreneurs that a community needs for the industry to function safely and responsibly.
  • Everyone agrees that a federal crackdown would be bad policy. Nearly three-quarters of the American public opposes it. The Governors in several states that have legalized — even those who did not personally support legalization in the first place —have written to the Attorney General, defending their states’ regulatory systems and asking him to not to intervene. And the Department of Justice doesn’t have the resources to enforce the federal ban on marijuana in the 46 states who laws currently violate it.

Speaking To The Middle About “Safe Haven” Legislation:

  • We need to resolve the conflict between state legalization and federal prohibition by creating a safe haven for states that have robust regulatory systems. With a waiver system, states will be able to more effectively regulate their marijuana markets because they won’t be hamstrung by concerns that limit state employees from interacting with marijuana due to fear of being targeted by federal officials—even for consumer protection purposes like testing and labeling. Banks will be able to serve legal marijuana businesses, ending their need to rely on all-cash systems that present a huge risk for crime. And participants in legal state markets—from cancer patients to business owners—will no longer have to live in fear of future federal prosecution.
  • Not all state marijuana legalization laws are created equal. Safe haven proposals like the SMART Enforcement Act introduced by Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-WA) would give the federal government a tool to guide the states, through the waiver process, to establish strict and effective systems that protect important federal interests. Other proposed solutions could leave the government unable to step in to prevent drugged driving, youth access, or gang violence. If the federal government’s hands are tied, it could perpetuate a wild west of marijuana, where states establish wildly differing regulatory schemes that don’t take into account federal interests or prioritize public safety.
  • The SMART Enforcement Act would establish a process for ongoing oversight by requiring that waivers are reauthorized every three years, if eligible. It would guarantee that the federal government will have a chance to monitor whether states are regulating marijuana responsibly, review data on long-term effects of legalization, and prompt a course correction if need be.

For a look at the other four topics, visit the Third Way story

Lanae Erickson Hatalsky and Nathan Kasai contributed to this report. For more information or assistance, please contact Sarah Trumble at strumble@thirdway.org or (202) 384-1722.

5 Hot Cannabis Cocktails To Get You In The Mood For Fall

It’s been getting a bit chilly outside at night. That slight nip in the air that calls out for a wood fire, or a touch of smoke from within my glass. I call attention to things that I can do with a bottle of Scotch, a bottle of Bourbon and a bottle of Rum.

The first cocktail is a take on the perennial classic, the hot Buttered Scotch. There is nothing more classic than a butterscotch candy, or a topping a steaming mug of hot oolong tea with a pat of butter and a sizeable portion of your grandfather’s favorite, Chivas Regal. The marvelous blended whisky is a staple in many bars and should be able to augment even a cup of basic English Tea with aplomb. But of course, in keeping with my principle of using only the best ingredients, I want to create a hot butter-Scotch that sticks inside your mind and doesn’t go away easily.

The good doctor Penelope was very fond of a slug of Scotch, added to his hot tea in the morning. Liquid cereal he would say when he was caught adding an extra shot to his cup of Oolong tea. I couldn’t agree more, he outlived all his doctors to a ripe age of 99. Powerful medicine the good doctor would say just before adding another ounce or two when no one was looking.

Dr. Penelope’s Strong Tea

  • 2 oz. Chivas Regal Scotch Whiskey (not the expensive stuff- you won’t taste it anyhow!)
  • 6 oz. Oolong Tea (steaming hot!)
  • Pinch of Chinese ‘Five Star’ Powder blended into a pat or two of sweet butter
  • Pinch of Himalayan Pink Salt

Preheat a mug that resonates with you. Add the Chivas Regal or other fine blended whiskey. Add the Five Star Butter. Top with the steaming hot tea. Add a pinch of pink salt. Serve.

Pour another ounce or so, if necessary for the good doctor and for healing!

Down in the British Virgin Islands, where I learned to sail, things are a great deal grimmer at present. But I choose to remember the good things and the drinks I enjoyed along the way.

One of my favorite drinks is a hot buttered rum. It is especially delicious on a cool night, after a filling meal. After you return to the yacht, you find a few bottles that haven’t been turned into Rum and Cokes. As you know, this drink can make it with any kind of rum that you like, but I prefer one that is Agricole in nature. Made from freshly crushed sugar cane juice instead of molasses. These rums are from the island of Martinique- you will want the very best. I’d preheat my mug with boiling water and toss it out into the dish sink in the galley — no sense in wasting good water on a yacht. There is a use for everything that says water, when sailing on a yacht.

Candy Colored Clown (aka Hot Buttered Rum With Cannabutter)

Pre-make: Decarb your cannabis with the Ardent Nova Decarboxylation device. Add to about a cup of ghee. Simmer the cannabis with the ghee for about two hours at around 160 degrees, strain, form into bars and freeze until ready to use. You can also use the Magical Butter Machine if you have one of these marvelous creations. Set the butter aside and slice into pats for easy use.

  • 3 oz. uncolored, unflavored, rum. (I like Clement for the Agricole. If you want a molasses rum, may I suggest Foursquare. Damn good stuff. No color or sugar added!)
  • 1 oz. Coconut Cream
  • 1 oz. or to taste Canna Butter (as above)
  • 1 oz. Caramel Sauce
  • 6 oz. Hot Tea of your choice

Combine all the ingredients in a preheated mug. First the butter, then the coconut cream, follow with the rum and then the caramel sauce. Top with the tea of your desire. Fresh nutmeg finishes this lovely excursion.

Jamaican Coffee With Cannabutter

Tia Maria when added to Coffee and hit with a bit of freshly whipped cream is one of life’s true pleasures.

  • 1 oz. Cannabutter
  • 3 oz. Tia Maria
  • 1 oz. Jamaican Rum
  • Strong Jamaican Coffee (black always!)

Preheat mug. Add the cannabutter. Add the Tia Maria. Add the Jamaican Rum. Add the Hot Coffee. Stir. Serve.

A hot punch is one of my favorite ways to end or to begin the day- if given the opportunity of course, I’d always begin the day with a hot punch with the base being bourbon. For this delicious slurp, I’d suggest a bourbon from Barrell Bourbon. Darned good stuff with flavors that come from all around your brain. Calling out for a hot punch with fine whiskey is better when using the finest liquor that money can buy.

Moroccan Mint Tea With Bourbon Whiskey

  • Moroccan Mint Tea, freshly brewed
  • Fresh Spearmint
  • 3 oz. Barrell Bourbon Whiskey

Preheat your favorite teacup. Brew your mint tea to your taste and keep warm. Add the Spearmint to a pre-heated cup. Add the Barrell Bourbon. Top with the Moroccan Tea. Pinch a bit of mint over the top. Serve.

One of my favorite Hot Toddies is no more than the sum of its parts. It’s deeply healing and it involves the use of ingredients you probably have at home. Ok, so you may not have Barr Hill Gin, (made by hand in Vermont from Raw Honey and local grain) but you certainly can get gin, raw honey, hot tea and Lemon and hot tea. The Raw Honey Gin is so well made and it makes your life much easier, using the best ingredients that money can buy.

Hot Bee’s Knees

  • 1 Tbsp raw honey
  • 2 pinwheels of lemon
  • 3 oz. Barr Hill Gin (or a fine Botanical Gin)
  • 4 oz. Hot Tea
  • 1 pinch of sea salt

Preheat a mug. Add the Raw Honey. Add the Gin. Add the Lemon. Add the Hot Tea. Add the pinch of sea salt. Serve!

Science Says: Ugly Husbands Equal Happier Wives

0

When you see a gorgeous woman with a not-so gorgeous man, what thought crosses you mind? It’s likely something along the lines of, “What does she see in him?” But the correct assumption, according to science, should lean more towards, “She must be really happy!”

Giving hope to every dad bod out there, a recent study finds that wives who have less attractive husbands are happier with their bodies.

https://giphy.com/gifs/beautyandthebeast-l0HlMbaqMnb09XZBu

The basis of the study looked at the correlation between how hot a woman’s partner was and her anxiety about needing to stay thin.

The relationship between women’s objective physical attractiveness and their dieting motivations and behaviors may depend upon their social environment—specifically, their romantic partners’ attractiveness—such that less attractive women with more attractive partners may be particularly motivated to diet.

Researchers out of Florida State University examined 113 newlyweds (married less than 4 months). After completing a set of questions to assess their desire to be thin, photographs of the participants were taken and ranked on a scale of 1 to 10 by two teams of evaluators. The women who ranked the lowest in attractiveness but were married to attractive husbands were found to be the most motivated to lose weight.

On the flip side, the study found that attractive women married to less attractive men were rated as being the happiest. There’s something to be said about not feeling the need to be sexy around your spouse all the time or competing for their desire.

https://giphy.com/gifs/thebachelor-episode-10-abc-xUA7aSU8tgGH9rT2qk

Results also showed that women tend to misperceive how thin their spouses want them to be.

This supports another study from the University of Tennessee that studied 82 newlyweds and found similar results: that men who married more attractive women were more likely to offer emotional support.

While men who married pretty women are content to bask in the glory of their partner’s beauty, men who are more attractive than their wives are more likely to offer less emotional and practical support to their partner. Study leader Jim McNulty was quoted in London’s Daily Mail as saying, “Attractive men have available to them more short-term mating opportunities. This may make them less satisfied and less committed to the marital relationship.”

Takeaway? The influence of husbands on their wives is pretty significant, attractive or not. And also, beauty really is in the eye of the beholder.

Is This New Wine Accessory The Cure For Hangovers?

0

Back in 2015, a guy by the name of David Meadows introduced wine drinkers to a “wand” that filters histamines and sulfites from wine, citing those two ingredients as the impetus for potential “unfavorable reactions” or hangovers in some people, including himself.

Meadows, the CEO and co-founder of PureWine says his company did some research and found that up to 75 percent of adult consumers may experience headaches, flushed skin or nasal congestion after drinking wine.

Now, PureWine is taking the filter thing one step further. Te company has developed a plastic, disposable spout that will launch sometime this month.According to myAJC.com, “It fits in the bottle like a cork and filters wine before it’s poured into a glass. The filtration process takes about 10 seconds from when the wine is poured to when it hits the glass.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BYEiecPlPcS

Like most “too good to be true” products, there are naysayers. Matthew Feldman, a private-practice allergist at the Dallas Allergy and Asthma Center, is suspect of the filters, stating not enough research has been done to validate PureWine’s claims that their products prevent wine allergies by selectively targeting histamines and sulfites,

But Meadows says his company uses the word allergy to get their message across, when in reality, his product is intended to help people who may have an intolerance or sensitivity to wine.

If you don’t want to wait for the spouts to hit shelves, the wands are sold on Amazon, Total Wine, and various other boutique shops (a pack of three wands retails for $9.99).

Bi-Partisan Senatorial Support Emerges For Medical Cannabis Research

Senator Cory Gardner (R) co-sponsored bipartisan legislation to pave new ways toward medical marijuana research. Although he and some of his collaborating colleagues are opposed to legal weed, they see the light when it comes to medicinal use and think we’ve neglected this natural, healing plant in the laboratories and medical testing facilities. He hopes it to be a big win for Colorado.

“Our medical community continues to find new ways medical marijuana can help patients, but currently there are too many barriers that are holding back even further advancements and research,” he said in a written statement. “This legislation is simple. It will make it easier for our universities, hospitals and scientists to look at new ways that medical marijuana can be used for treatment.”

The bill has lead sponsors and cosponsors from both sides of the aisle. Senator Orrin Hatch is a Utah Republican, Brian Schatz a Hawaiian Democrat. Cosponsor Senator Chris Coons is a Delaware Democrat and Senator Thom Tillis is a North Carolina Republican.

The measure basically aims to streamline the registration process for scientific and medicinal marijuana research and make more cannabis product available for mass produced medical marijuana infused goods approved by the FDA.

While making a floor speech regarding the bill, Sen. Hatch said that he worried that in their zeal to enforce marijuana laws (he’s against straight up pot use), they were blinding themselves to the natural resources around them, namely the medical benefits of weed.

The legislation also requires that the National Institution on Drug Abuse develop recommendations for growing and producing the marijuana needed for research. Under the bill, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions would also have to increase the national pot quota to rise up to the needs of the ever changing and exploring scientific and medical communities.

While the FDA, NIDA and Sessions will likely not be happy campers – to say the least, maybe this time they will have eyes to see the changing landscape around them. Maybe they will hear Hatch’s concerns or even the blustering cries of those who simply want to medicate naturally. Either way, these brave senators are doing their best to provide clean, safe and plentiful medicine.

Gossip: Fergie And Josh Duhamel Split After 8 Years Of Marriage; Marilyn Manson On Justin Bieber: “He Was A Real Piece Of S–t”

Fergie and Josh Duhamel have decided to end their relationship after eight years of marriage.

They released a joint statement, saying:

“With absolute love and respect we decided to separate as a couple earlier this year. To give our family the best opportunity to adjust, we wanted to keep this a private matter before sharing it with the public. We are and will always be united in our support of each other and our family.”

The two are parents to 4-year-old son Axl Jack. We wish them the best.

Marilyn Manson On Justin Bieber: “He Was A Real Piece Of Shit”

After his image was used (allegedly without his consent) in Justin Bieber’s Purpose tour merchandise in 2016, Manson had some not-so favorable word’s for pop music’s biggest heartthrob as a result of a not-so favorable interaction at a Los Angeles hotspot.

“I ran into him in some fancy bar where a lot of celebrities—a word that I despise—go. I saw a little girl in a pink hoodie with blond hair, and it turns out to be Bieber.”

“I sit down, and I say, ‘Hey, so you wore my shirt and everything onstage.’ He was one of those touchy people that hit you when they talk, and he comes up to about dick height. Then he goes, ‘I made you relevant again.’”

“[Bieber] was a real piece of s–t in the way he had the arrogance to say that.”

He says he told the younger star, “‘That was a great idea you had about doing ‘The Beautiful People’ at your show at Staples Center tomorrow.’ And he goes, ‘Yeah, it was,’ not knowing that I told him an idea that I had just made up. His tour manager sat down, and I asked, ‘What time is sound check tomorrow? What time should I be there? Because we’re going to do ‘Beautiful People.” Obviously, when 4 p.m. rolled around the next day, I just didn’t show.”

Love the fresh dirt we bring over daily from Naughty Gossip? Let us know in the comments!

Don't Miss Your Weekly Dose of The Fresh Toast.

Stay informed with exclusive news briefs delivered directly to your inbox every Friday.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.