MUSIC

Willie Nelson Is No Longer a Pothead

The 86-year-old country icon says he's quit marijuana.

Willie NelsonFarm Aid Festival at Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, USA - 21 Sep 2019

Photo by Suzanne Cordeiro/Shutterstock

Willie Nelson, country music royalty and certified stoner, has apparently nixed the devil's lettuce.

Nelson, who turns 87 next year and recently released his 69th solo studio album, told San Antonio radio station KSAT that he had to quit smoking marijuana due to health issues. "I have abused my lungs quite a bit in the past, so breathing is a little more difficult these days and I have to be careful," the Red-Headed Stranger explained. "I started smoking cedar bark, went from that to cigarettes to whatever...And that almost killed me."

But this unlikely news shouldn't come as a total surprise; just last August, Nelson canceled an upcoming tour, citing "breathing problems." That time off the road apparently wasn't enough to heal him after over six decades of indulging in weed.

Nelson started his own marijuana company, Willie's Reserve, in 2015 after recreational use of the drug started becoming legalized in a few states. "It's nice to watch it being accepted—knowing you were right all the time about it: that it was not a killer drug," he said in an April cover story for Rolling Stone. "It's a medicine."

Willie Nelson Discusses His New Weed Brand "Willie's Reserve"www.youtube.com

Nelson also told Rolling Stone that "marijuana saved [his] life" and helped him steer away from cigarettes and whiskey—vices that proved much more dangerous for him, causing pneumonia and unbearable hangovers. He had his first joint in 1954. "I think that weed kept me from wanting to kill people," he added. "And probably kept a lot of people from wanting to kill me, too."

If breathing issues are the only thing preventing Nelson from getting high, good thing Willie's Reserve also offers infused chocolates and sour candy. Most importantly, he's happy to just be alive. "I'm glad to be here," he told KSAT. "I'm lucky to be here."

CULTURE

Bill Cosby Wants to Talk About Race: He Says His Jury Is a "Set Up"

The convicted sexual assaulter isn't backing down.

Bill Cosby Finally Speaks Behind Bars: "It's All A Setup" - CH News

In 2018, Bill Cosby was convicted of drugging and sexually assaulting Andrea Constand—just one of five women who accused Cosby of sexual misconduct.

Cosby's lawyers have called these women "party girls," "pathological liars," and "robbers," claiming they're only in this case for potential financial gain. Though there have been years of rumors and allegedly dozens of victims, the famed 82-year-old comedian is still arguing that he's the victim in this situation and that the entirety of the case has been a sham. Recently, Cosby gave his first interview since beginning to serve his 3-to-10-year sentence in a maximum security penitentiary in Pennsylvania.

"It's all a set up. That whole jury thing. They were imposters," Cosby told Black Press USA.

Cosby received no special treatment during his interview. His spokesman, Andrew Wyatt, was also on the line, and Cosby's calls were limited to 15 minutes in accordance with the penitentiary's restrictions.

"It's all political," he argued. During his time in prison, Cosby has often spoken at meetings for Mann Up, an inmate reform program for African American men. In the interview, Cosby positioned his incarceration as an issue of racism and the disproportionate imprisonment of black people compared to white people. Though that gap is shrinking, the unfairness of the justice system against people of color is still a massive issue—however, for Cosby to blame his incarceration on race alone and continuously claim he's never committed sexual assault is entirely misguided and, frankly, disgusting.

We absolutely need criminal justice reform, especially as it pertains to race. But if Cosby wants to talk statistics, let's discuss how less than 5 percent of perpetrators in sexual assault cases get incarcerated. Let's discuss how about three out of four sexual assaults go unreported. And if Cosby wants to talk race in sexual assault cases, let's talk about how 22 percent of black women have been raped. Let's talk about the increased risk of domestic violence among black folks in the LGBTQIA+ community. Let's talk about sexual assault survivors like Cyntoia Brown, who at 16, shot and killed a man who picked her up for sex; she was tried as an adult and sentenced to life in prison. And let's talk about the exclusion of black women's experiences in studies of sexual assault on college campuses, and how these survivors are too often discouraged to come forward, especially if their rapist was a black man—largely in part to men like Cosby, who position it as a race issue in all the wrong ways.