What does it mean to rebuild a neighborhood? Some people start with things like lowering the crime rate, new jobs or affordable housing – and others head straight to the walls. At least that's the approach of a young artist living in downtown LA, known by many as ESPY.
Anytime art and sport collide, curious things are bound to go down. Nowhere is this more evident than in the video just made by Antonio Vicentini – artist and gifted storyteller –especially when it comes to capturing skateboarding's deep and colorful history here in California.
In Valley Uprising, a new documentary from Sender Films, you're granted access to the epic 60-year evolution of rock climbing and outsider rebellion in the Yosemite Valley.
From concentrates to cooking to careers to hemp apparel, cannabis was the only thing on everyone's mind the weekend following your favorite cannabis-friendly holiday: 420. On Friday, April 21st, we took the ultimate ride to this year's SoCal Cannabis Cup in San Bernardino, hosted by High Times.
What better way to spend a Sunday afternoon than recovering with a bunch of Burners fresh off the Playa? Yesterday's UR ART Fest in Santa Monica is part of a summer music series highlighting sustainability, creativity, chill vibes and seriously deep cuts that go bump into the night.
Two days in the desert heat is not an optimal place for heavy cannabis concentrates, but this weekend, the scorched-earth of San Bernardino played host to the second annual Chalice California, a festival celebrating art, glass, music and hash.
For most, a pitstop in Loveland usually means grabbing a beer from one of the many standout craft breweries dotting the town. Although there was some delicious local hemp ale at the event, last Saturday had visitors envisioning not frothy fountains of gold, but vast fields of green – hemp of course.
Pro-cannabis legislation in the West has created a swelling Green Rush, attracting restless entrepreneurs en masse, those looking to cash in on the legitimate game. Everybody has their own strand of ideas, but most know getting high stays in demand. The push for cannabis in America suggests it’s impossible to turn back now and this American harvest season changed history forever.