Smart Cookie

What better way to curb the munchies than a box of Thin Mints! She may not have been old enough to feel the high, but a Californian Girl Scout saw a golden opportunity in the state’s new laws legalizing marijuana.

The Girl Scout in San Diego set up outside of a pot shop — and managed to sell more than 300 boxes in six hours. According to the New York Times, that’s likely more than $1,500 raised.

The store put out an Instagram photo with the girl, essentially advertising her goodies — and encouraging people to come along with friends to buy some cannabis. The post drew more than 1,400 likes.

The marijuana dispensary “is not on the approved booth site list,” according to a Girl Scouts San Diego spokeswoman. Technically, though, the smart seller was walking along the sidewalk pulling her wagon filled with cookie boxes rather than sitting at a booth.

Some have called the actions irresponsible, even going so far as claiming “child endangerment.” But according to the Times, the Girl Scouts don’t have a national policy for this kind of situation. Scouts are generally given free rein to sell cookies where they want. A spokesperson for the Girl Scouts of the USA, told the Times that selling in front of a legal pot shop is “not any different than selling in front of any other kind of shop. It just happens to be a marijuana dispensary.”

Recent Articles

Even without the representation and recognition they deserve, women have always been at the center of the cannabis movement.
There are objects Americans buy because they need them, and objects Americans buy because they let them be a certain kind of person. A perfectly functional version exists, usually for a fraction of the price. But the other version comes with a name, a story, and a reason to pay extra.
Walk into any warehouse rave, desert gathering, or rooftop after-hours in 2026, and you’ll feel it: the psychedelic underground is back, louder, weirder, and far more self-aware than its ‘60s predecessor ever imagined.
In 62 BC, Julius Caesar announced his plan to divorce his second wife, Pompeia. She had been involved in an ancient Roman sex scandal, accused of flirting with another man during a women-only religious event.
ile Mike Wittenberg sat in a Dominican Republic prison, a thought occurred to him. “I could appreciate flushing the toilet,” he said. “When you’re in a third-world jail without running water 23.5 hours a day, you learn to appreciate the little things.”
When it comes to marketing, cannabis is different from every other consumer good available today. If sales start to dip in traditional retail, you can simply increase ad spending. However, with companies like Google, Meta, and even traditional broadcasters placing strict bans or severe limitations on cannabis advertising, the standard “pay-to-play” system just doesn’t work.
It feels impossible sometimes to escape the more ridiculousness aspects of pop culture—like pickleball, whatever a Labubu is, and the inevitable media frenzy surrounding Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's upcoming wedding. Thankfully, there’s at least one trend that’s still on the rise that I can get behind, which is kratom.
When Adelia Carrillo (Fakhri) and Parisa Rad first sat down for brunch in Phoenix, AZ, with a few other women in the cannabis industry, they had no idea how that moment would change the trajectory of their lives. “The energy in that room was transformative,” Adelia says.