Rescheduling Is the Signal. Not the System.
The next decade won’t belong to the loudest weed market. It will belong to the city that knows how to turn chaos into an industry.
The next decade won’t belong to the loudest weed market. It will belong to the city that knows how to turn chaos into an industry.
The female plant produces the flower. Women are reshaping the consumer market. The smartest move for cannabis may be to stop borrowing old tech mythology and start trusting the leadership rhythm this industry actually requires. The cannabis industry has a metaphor sitting in plain sight. Cultivators prize the female plant
For a while, Illinois cannabis had the clean moral architecture of a campaign promise. When J.B. Pritzker ran for governor, legalization was not just a growth story or a cultural wink. It was framed as repair. Expungement. Social equity. A chance, however imperfect, to address the damage done by
Chicago has rarely been the place where a new industry is invented. It is, however, where industries grow up. Grain trading matured here. Railroads converged here. Futures markets professionalized here. Consumer packaged goods scaled here. The city’s core competency is application — taking something messy, regional, or experimental and building
Reserve Your Seat Now - Salvage One, Chicago, Illinois - Thursday, May 28 - Join the room where Midwest cannabis leaders build real alignment.
Legalization changed markets, but not cultural memory. Cannabis today exists in a complicated space between prohibition-era fear and modern normalization.
Cannabis, hemp, regulation, and global opportunity are colliding in a fragmented market still searching for equilibrium.
A multibillion-dollar cannabis industry now exists without the coherent research and education framework a mature sector requires.
Grown In returns to explore how cannabis, hemp, beverage, research, and policy are reshaping the industry — and why Chicago is well positioned to help lead the next phase.