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Psy Diaries - #024 Ben Westhoff: time to reschedule psychedelics

#024 Ben Westhoff: time to reschedule psychedelics

12/23/21 • 26 min

Psy Diaries

Summary:
We talk with Ben Westhoff — award winning reporter and author of Fentanyl, Inc — about LSD on a mountain hike, hip hop artist arrest records, and magic mushrooms at a work conference.
Highlights:
— NUGGET AND A NOODLE: Toronto votes to decriminalize all drugs; are transcendent experiences simply a chemical reaction for Darwinian evolution (0:35)

— Ben's relationship with East Coast hip-hop (2:38)

— Research on the Opioid epidemic (3:09)

— Challenging parts of the book writing process (5:47)

— What surprised Ben about hip-hop culture (7:02)

— Celebrities changing attitudes as they grow older (9:25)

— Why LSD is arguably safer than Water (12:05)

— How LSD gives Ben profound confidence (14:31)

— Why LSD's production should be standardized (21:55)

— Teaser from his upcoming book Little Brother: Love Tragedy and My Search for the Truth (22:21)

— SOUL SEARCH: Ben's three favorite rappers of all time... (24:55)

Ben Westhoff:
He is a best-selling, award-winning investigative journalist who writes about culture, drugs, and poverty. His books are taught around the country and have been translated into languages all over the world.
His new book Little Brother: Love, Tragedy, and My Search for the Truth (May 24, 2022, Hachette Books) details his search for the man who killed Jorell Cleveland, Westhoff’s longtime mentee in the Big Brothers Big Sisters program. Part memoir, part true crime, it’s a three-year investigation set in the northern suburbs of St. Louis that uncovers a heartbreaking cycle of poverty, poor education, drug trafficking, and violence.
Westhoff’s 2019 work Fentanyl, Inc.: How Rogue Chemists Are Creating the Deadliest Wave of the Opioid Epidemic is the bombshell first book about fentanyl, which is causing the worst drug crisis in American history. Westhoff was interviewed about the book for Fresh Air and Joe Rogan, and published an excerpt in The Atlantic. Since the book’s publication, Westhoff has advised top government officials on the fentanyl crisis, including from the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, the U.S. embassy in Beijing, and the U.S. State Department.
Westhoff’s 2016 book Original Gangstas: Tupac Shakur, Dr. Dre, Eazy-E, Ice Cube, and the Birth of West Coast Rap is one of the best-selling hip-hop books of all time. It received raves from Rolling Stone and People, and a starred review in Kirkus. S. Leigh Savidge, Academy Award nominee and co-writer of Straight Outta Compton said it "may be the best book ever written about the hip hop world."
Westhoff's work has appeared in the Library of Congress, The Atlantic, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, NPR, Rolling Stone, New York, Forbes, Playboy, Vice, Oxford American, Pitchfork, and others. He's been honored by the National Association of Black Journalists, the National Entertainment Journalism Awards, Religion Newswriters Association, Best Music Writing, Best of Southern Food Writing, L.A. Press Club, and the Missouri Press Association.
He has been interviewed as an expert commentator for CNN, BET, A&E, and ITV, and is the former L.A. Weekly music editor and Voice Media Group Senior music editor. He's a contributor to the Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap, and his 2011 book on southern hip-hop, Dirty South: OutKast, Lil Wayne, Soulja Boy, and the Southern Rappers Who Reinvented Hip-Hop was a Library Journal best seller.
Find Ben here:
https://www.benwesthoff.com/

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Summary:
We talk with Ben Westhoff — award winning reporter and author of Fentanyl, Inc — about LSD on a mountain hike, hip hop artist arrest records, and magic mushrooms at a work conference.
Highlights:
— NUGGET AND A NOODLE: Toronto votes to decriminalize all drugs; are transcendent experiences simply a chemical reaction for Darwinian evolution (0:35)

— Ben's relationship with East Coast hip-hop (2:38)

— Research on the Opioid epidemic (3:09)

— Challenging parts of the book writing process (5:47)

— What surprised Ben about hip-hop culture (7:02)

— Celebrities changing attitudes as they grow older (9:25)

— Why LSD is arguably safer than Water (12:05)

— How LSD gives Ben profound confidence (14:31)

— Why LSD's production should be standardized (21:55)

— Teaser from his upcoming book Little Brother: Love Tragedy and My Search for the Truth (22:21)

— SOUL SEARCH: Ben's three favorite rappers of all time... (24:55)

Ben Westhoff:
He is a best-selling, award-winning investigative journalist who writes about culture, drugs, and poverty. His books are taught around the country and have been translated into languages all over the world.
His new book Little Brother: Love, Tragedy, and My Search for the Truth (May 24, 2022, Hachette Books) details his search for the man who killed Jorell Cleveland, Westhoff’s longtime mentee in the Big Brothers Big Sisters program. Part memoir, part true crime, it’s a three-year investigation set in the northern suburbs of St. Louis that uncovers a heartbreaking cycle of poverty, poor education, drug trafficking, and violence.
Westhoff’s 2019 work Fentanyl, Inc.: How Rogue Chemists Are Creating the Deadliest Wave of the Opioid Epidemic is the bombshell first book about fentanyl, which is causing the worst drug crisis in American history. Westhoff was interviewed about the book for Fresh Air and Joe Rogan, and published an excerpt in The Atlantic. Since the book’s publication, Westhoff has advised top government officials on the fentanyl crisis, including from the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, the U.S. embassy in Beijing, and the U.S. State Department.
Westhoff’s 2016 book Original Gangstas: Tupac Shakur, Dr. Dre, Eazy-E, Ice Cube, and the Birth of West Coast Rap is one of the best-selling hip-hop books of all time. It received raves from Rolling Stone and People, and a starred review in Kirkus. S. Leigh Savidge, Academy Award nominee and co-writer of Straight Outta Compton said it "may be the best book ever written about the hip hop world."
Westhoff's work has appeared in the Library of Congress, The Atlantic, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, NPR, Rolling Stone, New York, Forbes, Playboy, Vice, Oxford American, Pitchfork, and others. He's been honored by the National Association of Black Journalists, the National Entertainment Journalism Awards, Religion Newswriters Association, Best Music Writing, Best of Southern Food Writing, L.A. Press Club, and the Missouri Press Association.
He has been interviewed as an expert commentator for CNN, BET, A&E, and ITV, and is the former L.A. Weekly music editor and Voice Media Group Senior music editor. He's a contributor to the Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap, and his 2011 book on southern hip-hop, Dirty South: OutKast, Lil Wayne, Soulja Boy, and the Southern Rappers Who Reinvented Hip-Hop was a Library Journal best seller.
Find Ben here:
https://www.benwesthoff.com/

Previous Episode

undefined - #023 David Champion: the dawn of a decriminalization deluge

#023 David Champion: the dawn of a decriminalization deluge

Summary:
We talk with David Champion — CEO and Founder of Maya Health — about the discovery of intentional psychedelics, beating nicotine with one session, and what it's like to lead a successful decriminalization campaign.
Highlights:

— NUGGET AND A NOODLE: More lawsuits for access to Psychedelics; a world with legal moderate use of any drug (0:44)

— David’s role in the decriminalize Denver movement (2.41)

— David’s introduction to intentional psychedelics (10.33)

— Challenges during psychedelic use (17.33)

— A fond mystical psychedelic encounter (24.33)

— How David overcame smoking addiction in one session (25.22)

— Debating legalization or decriminalization of psilocybin (30.39)

— What excites David about Maya’s future plans (36.36)

— SOUL SEARCH: Relive the life of any historical figure... who do you choose? (37.43)
David Champion:
He is the CEO of Maya, a real world evidence platform designed to power the ecosystem of researchers, legislators, life sciences, and insurance payors at the frontier of mental healthcare.
He also directs Unlimited Sciences, a psychedelic research nonprofit combining academia with data science to understand how psychedelic healing is being conducted in the underground and surface best practices to inform psychedelic research at large.
In 2019 he served as a campaign-lead in the Denver Psilocybin Initiative, helping Denver become the first US city to reform psilocybin policy.
Prior, he was Co-founder & CPO at Baker Technologies, which he exited after achieving a valuation of $250MM. Leading a team of up to 100, he helped scale at 14% month-over-month to a 50% market share of SMBs in the early cannabis sector.
He graduated summa cum laude in Architecture from Cambridge University and built a nonprofit to help Kenyan children access schooling. Brought up in Papua New Guinea, Portugal and Scotland, he began his career in New York with Daniel Libeskind, working on the Ground Zero masterplan.
He has a decade of experience designing consumer software and his interests are behavioral data, digital art, user experience design, playing piano, and mindfulness.
Find David here:
email - [email protected]
https://www.dschampion.com/
https://www.mayahealth.com/team-members/david-champion

Next Episode

undefined - #025 Ronan Levy: discovering joy that's hiding in plain sight

#025 Ronan Levy: discovering joy that's hiding in plain sight

Summary:
We talk with Ronan Levy — executive director of Field Trip Health — about the cost of acting with principle, knowing when to take risks, and finding joy.
Highlights:
— NUGGET AND A NOODLE: New York bill to legalize psilocybin; is it better to have some people NEVER do psychedelics (0:37)
— Surprises in the psychedelics industry (3:19)

— Convincing psychedelics skeptics (5:19)

— How a psychedelic experience helped to launch Field Trip (8:07)

— Ronan discusses his struggles with self-worth (15:02)

— Dangers of tying self-worth to external factors such as money (17:46)

— Do people know what they want? (25:47)

— How his law degree helps his entrepreneurial career (27:36)

— Helping people see the world through another person's eyes (35:36)

— SOUL SEARCH: Which mind-altering substance on a desert island (32:33)

Ronan Levy:
An entrepreneur and a visionary, Ronan is one the founders of Field Trip – with a mission to bring the world to life through psychedelics and psychedelic-enhanced psychotherapy.
Concurrent with his work at Field Trip, he is a partner at Grassfed Ventures, a venture capital and advisory firm focused on the cannabis and biotech industries and is Chief Strategy Officer and Member of the Board of Directors for Trait Biosciences Inc., a leading biotech company in the hemp and cannabis industries.
Prior to his current roles, Ronan co-founded Canadian Cannabis Clinics and CanvasRx Inc., the latter of which was acquired by Aurora Cannabis Inc. (NYSE: ACB) in 2016, after which he served as Senior Vice President, Business and Corporate Affairs for Aurora.
A lawyer by training, Ronan started his career as a corporate lawyer at Blake, Cassels Graydon LLP and Legal Counsel at CTVglobemedia Inc. (now Bell Media Inc.) He holds a Juris Doctor and a Bachelor of Commerce degree, both from the University of Toronto.
Find Ronan here:
https://www.fieldtriphealth.com/our-team
https://www.fieldtripping.fm/
https://twitter.com/ronandlevy

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