logo
P-Funk Legend George Clinton And Wiz Khalifa Bring The Funk To Weed: Here's What That Means

P-Funk Legend George Clinton And Wiz Khalifa Bring The Funk To Weed: Here's What That Means

Forbes07-05-2025

Wiz Khalifa and George Clinton at the concert celebrating the premiere of "Spinning Gold" held at ... More Avalon on March 29, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images) Variety via Getty Images
George Clinton, the visionary bandleader behind Parliament-Funkadelic and a pioneer of psychedelic funk, has spent six decades reshaping the boundaries of music, culture and consciousness. Now, at 83, he's entering an industry he's long championed from the sidelines: cannabis.
Clinton recently launched The Funk, a new cannabis brand created in partnership with Wiz Khalifa's Khalifa Kush, at a time when the U.S. market is projected to generate over $35.3 billion in legal sales in 2025 . The product debuted at Planet 13, the 112,000-square-foot Las Vegas dispensary that has become a launchpad for celebrity brands and immersive cannabis experiences.
And while dozens of entertainers have entered the space in recent years, Clinton arrives with a different kind of credibility. His relationship with cannabis dates back to the early 1960s—long before legalization—and has been inseparable from his music, worldview and public identity.
'I wanted it to match the music,' Clinton said in an exclusive interview. 'When you sit down, put on something funky and get your head right, you should think of The Funk.'
Clinton's history with cannabis began in the days of Acapulco Gold and unregulated Northern California grows. 'In the early '60s, it was all about whatever you could get,' he said. 'But it was always for the mind. That part never changed.' Forbes Carmelo Anthony's Cannabis Mission Comes Home: 'I Know The Door I Hold Open' By Javier Hasse
From doo-wop and Motown to the cosmic theatrics of Funkadelic, Clinton says cannabis was a constant presence; not just as a social lubricant but as creative fuel. 'We stayed lit to do all those albums,' he said. 'That was the atmosphere. It was part of the process.'
That process, he explains, wasn't about escape. It was about alignment—tuning into something deeper. Even before formal medical research caught up, Clinton says musicians intuitively understood the plant's power.
'I heard about the medical side back in the '60s. Stress, anxiety, chilling out—we knew,' he said. 'But America made more money pretending to stop it than selling it.'
He's blunt about the politics that kept cannabis underground: a mix of control, stigma and pharmaceutical interests.
'They sell you all kinds of drugs you can't pronounce, then give you another one to get off the first one,' he said. 'Cannabis could've handled a lot of it, if they'd just let it.' The Funk: From Studio To Shelf
Building on that personal legacy, Clinton's new cannabis line is more than a co-branded product: it's an extension of his artistic vision. The Funk launched with infused pre-rolls that combine Motorbreath flower and Daily Grape live resin, designed to deliver a heavy, unmistakable flavor profile.
'I wanted uncut funk,' Clinton said. 'The kind of stuff you light up and it tells you a story.'
The name, The Funk, nods to Clinton's lifelong mythology, but also references a track by his granddaughter titled 'Something Stank (And I Want Some)'—a generational echo that ties scent and sound together. The packaging draws from his signature cosmic visuals, echoed in a custom shoe collaboration with John Fluevog.
Clinton credits his wife with pushing the collaboration forward. 'She made sure we got it done,' he said. Forbes Ice-T Says He Doesn't Get High—So Why Did He Open A Cannabis Dispensary With A Playboy Playmate? By Javier Hasse
Clinton saw Planet 13, the massive Las Vegas dispensary where The Funk debuted, as more than just a storefront. 'It felt like the right place to lift off,' he said.
The infused pre-roll format is a strategic choice. In California, infused joints now account for more than 66% of all pre-roll sales, according to RollPros and BDSA data . Market leaders like Jeeter and STIIIZY have turned infused pre-rolls into high-volume, high-margin products—with Jeeter alone generating $26.7 million in California sales in a single quarter. Clinton and Khalifa are betting that authenticity—and funk—can carve out space in a category that's no longer an afterthought but the main event. Industry, Equity And The Long Road To Legalization
Clinton is not trying to become a cannabis policy advocate, but he has plenty to say about the contradictions he's seen.
'I'm not the one to stand in front of Congress and try to convince anybody,' he said. 'They'll just know I like it.'
For him, cannabis reform in the U.S. hasn't been about justice; it's been about economics. Institutions that once punished cannabis culture now profit from it. And the communities that built that culture are still waiting for equity.
According to the ACLU , Black Americans remain nearly four times more likely to be arrested for cannabis-related offenses than white Americans, despite similar usage rates. Meanwhile, the legal industry remains disproportionately white and male. Forbes Why Ice Cube Ditched Alcohol—And Built A Cannabis Brand Instead: 'Once I Found Good Weed, That Was It' By Javier Hasse
Clinton doesn't offer a policy roadmap, but he's clear about who belongs at the table: artists, legacy growers and anyone who helped normalize cannabis long before tax revenue justified it.
'Cannabis has always been good,' he said. 'They just finally figured out how to profit off of it without getting in trouble.' Music, Memory And A Multi-Generational Legacy
Clinton's entry into cannabis isn't a pivot; it's a natural continuation of the universe he's built over decades. From Parliament's space-age funk to the psychedelic undercurrents of Funkadelic, cannabis has always been part of the sound, not a side note.
Now, that legacy is being carried forward. Clinton is on tour with his children and grandchildren, celebrating the 50th anniversary of landmark albums—and passing the torch in real time. The Funk, too, reflects that handoff: its name is partly inspired by a track from Clinton's granddaughter and its packaging echoes the cosmic visuals that defined his mythos.
Meanwhile, a biopic directed by Eddie Murphy is in the works. Clinton doesn't know which parts of his story will make the cut, but he's confident the right ones will. Forbes Inside Snoop Dogg's 7-Brand Cannabis Beverage Empire: 'I'm Giving People Choices…You Sip, You Feel It, Nice And Easy' By Javier Hasse
'We weren't trying to top the charts. We were building characters people would want to talk about later,' he said.
With The Funk, he's adding one more chapter to that mythology. This time, in smoke. A Brand Built On Legacy, Not Hype
Celebrity cannabis brands are everywhere. What makes The Funk different is its source material: a lifetime lived inside the culture, not around it.
Clinton didn't enter the space for trend points. He's been here. And in a crowded market chasing volume and shelf space, The Funk leans into what made weed sacred in the first place: taste, timing, feel.
He's not chasing politics or influence. He's just doing what he's always done: building worlds you can step into.
As for the name—and the smell—Clinton put it simply: 'Something's stankin'—and they want some.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Surprise Video Shows Prince Harry and His Kids at Disneyland—But One Princess Lilibet Moment Made Me Do a Double Take
Surprise Video Shows Prince Harry and His Kids at Disneyland—But One Princess Lilibet Moment Made Me Do a Double Take

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Surprise Video Shows Prince Harry and His Kids at Disneyland—But One Princess Lilibet Moment Made Me Do a Double Take

​​We don't often get an unfiltered glimpse of Prince Harry these days—but this week, Meghan Markle shared an Instagram reel that gave us something close: a two-day Disneyland trip for daughter Lilibet's fourth birthday, complete with princess meet-and-greets, rides, cake and a surprisingly normal snapshot of family life. The video is cheerful and tightly edited, set to Peggy Lee's 'It's a Good Day.' We see Harry laughing on Space Mountain, grinning through Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters and trailing the kids around Cars Land in a backwards cap. Faces are covered with heart emojis, but there's enough to piece together who's who. Then comes the moment that made me do a double-take. Captured by Meghan Markle via Instagram Mid-reel, Meghan leads the kids into a Frozen-themed meet-and-greet. In a later shot, Lilibet—red hair, blue cap, floral dress—is seen holding hands with Elsa. Meghan's in mouse ears. Harry's filming. And suddenly, you're watching a real princess meet a fake one. Fans called it 'a full-circle fairytale,' but really, it's just a four-year-old's birthday party—with slightly more security. To that end, the real magic may not have been at Disneyland at all. In a quieter moment from the same week, Meghan posted a snapshot of Harry and Lilibet walking barefoot through a palm-lined path—her hand steady in his. 'Daddy's little girl and favorite adventurer,' she wrote. Because at the end of the day, Meghan may be the princess, but Harry is the ultimate girl dad. Prince Harry & Princess Lilibet's Bond Is on Full Display in Meghan Markle's Brand-New IG Post PureWow's editors and writers have spent more than a decade shopping online, digging through sales and putting our home goods, beauty finds, wellness picks and more through the wringer—all to help you determine which are actually worth your hard-earned cash. From our PureWow100 series (where we rank items on a 100-point scale) to our painstakingly curated lists of fashion, beauty, cooking, home and family picks, you can trust that our recommendations have been thoroughly vetted for function, aesthetics and innovation. Whether you're looking for travel-size hair dryers you can take on-the-go or women's walking shoes that won't hurt your feet, we've got you covered.

Horror Comedy ‘Clown In A Cornfield' Arrives On Streaming This Week
Horror Comedy ‘Clown In A Cornfield' Arrives On Streaming This Week

Forbes

time36 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Horror Comedy ‘Clown In A Cornfield' Arrives On Streaming This Week

Frendo the Clown in a scene from "Clown in a Cornfield." Clown in a Cornfield — a horror comedy from the director of Tucker & Dale vs. Evil — is coming to digital streaming this week. Directed by Eli Craig, Clown in a Cornfield opened in theaters on May 9. The summary for the movie reads, 'In Clown in a Cornfield, Quinn (Katie Douglas) and her father (Aaron Abrams) have just moved to the quiet town of Kettle Springs, hoping for a fresh start. Instead, she discovers a fractured community that has fallen on hard times after the treasured Baypen Corn Syrup Factory burned down. 'As the locals bicker amongst themselves and tensions boil over, a sinister, grinning figure emerges from the cornfields to cleanse the town of its burdens, one bloody victim at a time. Welcome to Kettle Springs. The real fun starts when Frendo the Clown comes out to play.' Clown in a Cornfield is based on Adam Cesare's book of the same name. The movie also stars Kevin Durand, Carson MacCormack, Cassandra Potenza, Verity Marks, Ayo Solanke, Vincent Muller and Will Sasso. As confirmed by a listing on Prime Video, Clown in a Cornfield arrived on digital streaming via premium video on demand on Tuesday, June 11. In addition to Prime Video, Clown in a Cornfield will be available for purchase for PVOD for $24.99 on such digital platforms as Apple TV, Fandango at Home and YouTube. Since PVOD rentals are typically $5 less than purchase prices, viewers can expect to rent Clown in a Cornfield for 48 hours for $19.99. Naturally, with the word 'clown' in the title of Clown in a Cornfield, Eli Craig knew that it would make fans think of the murderous Art the Clown from director Damien Leone's Terrifier horror hits. As such, Craig made a conscious decision to avoid the unrated horror and gore route of Leone's movies by trusting his own instincts by creating a line that he — and Frendo the Clown — should not cross. 'My gut is the line and sometimes I go to the point where I feel like I'm testing my own gut, where I can't really watch something myself,' Craig said in a Zoom conversation prior to the release of Clown in a Cornfield. "With Terrifier 3, I had to watch the film in little segments to study it and I realized, 'Oh wow, Damien Leone is a master.' I wanted to look at how he was doing in-camera special effects. [At the same time] I had to disassociate what I was seeing to process it. I had to think about the process of how he did stuff so I wouldn't puke.' However, Craig, added, he made sure to take full advantage of what an R rating allowed. 'I feel like I've hit the mark where most people are going to go, 'Ooh!' and start turning away, but then I'm done,' Craig explained. 'I have these moments that may be a little shocking, but there's just a touch of humor in it as well that makes it tolerable. 'I want to have the kills be quite real and a little bit shocking, gritty and brutal, but also have a touch of playfulness to them,' Craig added. 'They're not brutal to the point of being sickening, though. That's the line for me. I'm not interested in making a sickening movie. I want to make a fun movie that has kills in it.' Clown in a Cornfield has earned $7.2 million in domestic ticket sales and more than $532,000 internationally for a worldwide box office gross of $7.7 million to date. Craig said the production budget for the film was 'significantly less' than $10 million. The film also earned a 74% 'fresh' rating from Rotten Tomatoes critics based on 136 reviews, while audiences gave it a 59% 'rotten' score on RT's Popcornmeter based on 500-plus verified user ratings. Clown in a Cornfield arrives on PVOD on Tuesday.

Miley Cyrus Says She ‘Wasn't Allowed' to Perform ‘Hannah Montana' Songs After She ‘Left Disney': ‘Not Like I Wanted To'
Miley Cyrus Says She ‘Wasn't Allowed' to Perform ‘Hannah Montana' Songs After She ‘Left Disney': ‘Not Like I Wanted To'

Yahoo

time41 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Miley Cyrus Says She ‘Wasn't Allowed' to Perform ‘Hannah Montana' Songs After She ‘Left Disney': ‘Not Like I Wanted To'

Miley Cyrus had to leave 'Hannah Montana' behind after exiting the Disney Channel. In a recent conversation on Spotify's 'The Ringer' podcast, Cyrus said she 'wasn't allowed' to sing any of the original songs from her hit TV series 'Hannah Montana' after the show ended in 2011. More from Variety Why 'Somebody Somewhere' Star Bridget Everett Insisted Miley Cyrus' 'The Climb' Be Sam's Defining Anthem: It's the Song 'That Matters Most' Miley Cyrus on 'Something Beautiful' Visual Album and Writing Verses for Naomi Campbell: 'She Had No Notes' 'Something Beautiful with Miley Cyrus' Review: The Star Co-Directs an Album's Worth of Music Videos, Celebrating Her Herself 'After I left Disney, I wasn't allowed to perform any of the 'Hannah Montana' music,' she explained. 'It's not like I wanted to, I mean, performing 'The Best Of Both Worlds' between 'We Can't Stop' and 'Wrecking Ball,' wouldn't have really made sense.' 'It was still sad knowing those songs have my voice, my face, and I wasn't allowed to sing them,' she added. However, after Cyrus was named a Disney Legend at D23 2024, she was 'given permission to perform those songs in the future,' which Cyrus said was 'pretty cool.' 'Hannah Montana,' which followed a regular teen who lives a double life as the titular pop sensation, ran for 100 episodes from 2006-2011 on the Disney Channel. Other cast members included Emily Osment, Jason Earles, Billy Ray Cyrus, Mitchel Musso and Moises Arias. The former child star's latest project is 'Something Beautiful,' a 55-minute visual album that hits theaters June 12. At the premiere, Cyrus paid tribute to all the female artists who inspired her work. 'I completely worship and idolize the Tina Turners, the Donna Summers, Diana Ross and so many ladies before me that paved this path that I'm on,' she said. 'This is my journey but they made it so much easier because they've already broken down all the doors for me.' Best of Variety 25 Hollywood Legends Who Deserve an Honorary Oscar New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Animated Program — Can Netflix Score Big With 'Arcane,' 'Devil May Cry' and the Final Season of 'Big Mouth?'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store