

Described as a “creative chameleon,” Benjy Bradshaw is the epitome of a DIY musician… and in our humble opinion he’s an all around artiste! His multi-ethnic background (Native American, Portuguese, English, Irish) and private Catholic school education ultimately contributed to his constant exploration of self through visual and creative transformations. Although he is primarily inspired by dance, house, and new wave music, Benjy also loves to "art direct his life" -- experimenting with photography, makeup, fashion, and design.
Meet + Create with Benjy on Saturday, August 16th from 1-4pm at From Here to Sunday in Gowanus as a part of our SASS Summer Popsicle Popup series. RSVP.
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This is a full transcript from our Keep Pride Alive campaign interviews. It has been edited and condensed for clarity by Solonje Burnett, Weed Auntie. Photos by Benjy Bradshaw. Watch a part of our interview.
WA = Weed Auntie
BB = Benjy Bradshaw
WA: Please tell us your name, preferred pronouns, and career/passions.
BB: My name is Benjy Bradshaw, my pronouns are he/him/his. My passion is music and I’m an independent recording artist here in New York City.
WA: Give it up for the artists! So what did your family say about weed growing up?
BB: Growing up, weed was not seen as a good thing. It was a very taboo topic, and we basically thought of it as something that was associated with hippies. There just wasn’t a good light on it. It was for only one type of person and definitely not something we were encouraged to do.
WA: How does cannabis affect or enhance your creative process whether it’s making a zine, music, or designing a magical piece to adorn your body?
BB: Cannabis opens my eyes. My life is very busy. I am essentially working 6 days a week, from sunrise until bedtime, on all the creative tasks that allow me to be my creative self – music, fashion, makeup, design, etc. Saving a day where I can take cannabis and enjoy life, has become one of my new favorite things, along with SASS gummies and chocolates of course! Even just one day a week without technology, opening my eyes and heart to the world allows me to jump back into my work with more excitement, creative ideas, and joy.
WA: What does visibility mean to you?
BB: When someone or something is visible, it means it is recognized – whether or not it is also understood. Many of us have lived our lives in the shadows. We have had to tip toe around our identities to please the status quo. By living our true selves, we are opening doors for acknowledgement. By living authentically, we plant seeds in the minds of those who may not understand (and reaffirm growth for those who identify with us). Most importantly, by being visible, we give hope for a kinder world of understanding.
WA: Has anyone ever judged or labeled you for being a consumer of cannabis?
BB: Luckily I’ve had really supportive friends who have been there and haven’t seen it as a problem. I have that community around now, but it took a while to get there.
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WA: Do you feel like there’s a lack of authentic representation in the way cannabis users are depicted by brands, media and general pop culture?
BB: Yes, I think there’s a huge underrepresentation. I don’t see people like me or like my friends. There’s one type of vision of what it means to be a cannabis consumer. It’s not inclusive and very one-sided.
WA: What are some ways that we can create a more inclusive and accepting society for cannabis users?
BB: I think to create a more inclusive society, we need to be more mindful and open to the beautiful spectrum of people. There are people everywhere who love cannabis in all different types of forms. We need to have a space that’s about positivity. Giving everyone the freedom and ability to partake with no judgement. No matter how you look. If you’re wearing a little tutu or not. You can consume and enjoy life through the ways that feel like you.
WA: Love that! What is your favorite way to consume cannabis?
BB: I love edibles. Funny story, I can’t inhale. My freshman year in college, my friend tried to get me high and she gave me (brings his finger to his lips, motioning like he’s puffing on a joint) - I don’t even know what it’s called - and I couldn’t inhale. We were trying to watch Mean Girls and I was laughing so hard. She was like “you’re high” and I was like “no, it’s just a funny movie.” So anyway, it just never worked for me until like 10 years later my friend had an edible and it changed my life!
WA: Who do you think needs to be deliberately dosed?
BB: Oh! Well – tons of people. I think the bus I took to get here should be dosed because it would be a really fun ride. I would’ve been enjoying life for thirty minutes more before I came here!
WA: Who is included in your dream sweet sesh of queer icons? Who would you invite to indulge in some SASS with you?
BB: If I had to have someone here having SASS with me, we all know that Lady Gaga would be right here and I’d be like “Here Queen, here you go.” And then who’s the sassiest person I know? Um, a bunch of my drag queen friends and I would be like “Here everybody! Party time!” And we would just have a giant dance party. So Gaga, and all my friends.
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Find his music: Traxsource | Beatport | Spotify | Apple Music
Stay in touch: Instagram | Facebook | YouTube
Alexandra Jamieson is an artivist (artist + activist), creator of Fascism Tarot, Abortion Trading Cards, The Grift Deck and five books.
Follow her: Instagram | website
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity by Solonje Burnett, Weed Auntie. Watch the teaser.
WA = Weed Auntie
AJ = Alex Jamieson
WA: Can you tell us your name, preferred pronouns, and what you do for work/passion.
AJ: I'm Alex Jamison. I am she/her, and I am an artist of all stripes. Can't stop me from making things.

WA: Where did you grow up and how did your upbringing inform your thoughts around plant medicine and cannabis usage?
AJ: I grew up outside of Portland, Oregon on an old organic farm. My mom had an organic gardening radio show so I grew up knowing how to grow things in the ground. My mom was a hippie slash artist slash activist so I got all of that from her. We just always grew plants and used plants to help us with colds, coughs, compresses, all kinds of things. My whole life, I've always known that plants are medicine. So I never had any other belief than that cannabis was a plant that could be used for a variety of healing purposes.
WA: Has anyone ever judged you or labeled you for consuming weed whether in your family or professionally?
AJ: I've never received any judgment one way or the other for cannabis or weed. I'm very lucky, I mean, I grew up hippie central. So no, no judgment.

WA: You built a big portion of your life around being vegan. Writing multiple books on the subject and co-creating the film Super Size Me. Can you share a bit about the shift from veganism? How did it affect your identity?
AJ: You know, I actually became vegan because of health issues, and then I had to start eating animal products again because of health issues. The food and the plants that worked for me when I was 25 no longer worked for me when I was 35.
Along with that physical evolution, sadly, a lot of judgment came from the vegan community when I started eating meat again. I was ostracized. I was, I'll say, canceled. I was the subject of a lot of podcasts and articles saying what a terrible person I was. I got death threat emails when I started eating meat again because I was seen as a traitor, a murderer, et cetera. It was a really intense experience.




WA: How did you handle your removal from that community?
AJ: I had two good things going for me when I kind of came out as no longer vegan. One is that my family never judged me when I became vegan. They were just curious and supportive and when I started eating meat again they were curious and supportive. So incredible family AND I always had non-vegan friends. I had friends who were like, great, we don't care. And, you know, it's part, when anyone leaves a high demand group, I will say an intense religion or a cult or other high demand groups, it's really important to have people outside of that community who will support you.
WA: What's your favorite thing to cook or consume right now?
AJ: I mean, I love carbs. I love carbs so much. I was a vegan chef for several years and the first professional job that I got out of culinary school was as a vegan pastry chef so I've always loved baked goods. I love making pastries and cakes and it's just my favorite. I've never stopped loving making a good cupcake, a good brownie. I love dessert so much!
WA: I love that you are pastry or were a pastry chef specifically. Have you ever made infused treats?
AJ: Yes, I used to make myself batches of vegan cannabis butter. With Earth Balance, I think that's what that stuff is called. So it was basically margarine or butter with a bunch of chopped up cannabis, slowly heated on the stove. And I just kept it in the freezer. And when I needed to chill out, I would just make myself some toast, spread on some vegan cannabis butter, jam. Delightful.

WA: You’ve had a colorful career from holistic health counselor, gourmet natural foods and pastry chef, multibook author, watercolor and multimedia artist to activist – your evolution to me mirrors that of womanhood. How are you working with life's transitions?
AJ: Yeah, you could definitely see the undiagnosed Gen X ADHD creative just raw-dogging it through life! With that creative, supportive family came the confidence to try new things. But it has been very difficult to be a perimenopausal woman in this current reality. I’m very stressed out. My nervous system is shot. Dealing with serious hormonal issues, chronic migraines, a decade of insomnia. I do not use the word blessed lightly. But to have friends in cannabis has been a freaking goddess send at this time because I'm needing all the medicine to get through this.
WA: How did your relationship with your family and cannabis evolve?
AJ: My hippy mom was such a lightweight her entire life. Any substance had to be minuscule. She told this story about being an art student in fascist Spain in the 60s. And she accidentally ate a bunch of hash brownies because she didn't know they were filled with hash. She woke up two days later and so her only warning to me was be careful because you don't want to consume too much. And then when she was battling cancer in the last year of her life, I just brought her every tool I could find. My friend who made sauerkraut brought her sauerkraut. My friend who had organic weed brought that. So her fridge was filled with any kind of natural healing we could think of, including all her medicines.
WA: How was your relationship to cannabis and/or plant medicine shifted or evolved? What are your go to’s for relief and relaxation now?
AJ: I first started enjoying cannabis at the end of high school, and in college it was just pure party funsies with friends. And then I think I didn't have any for like a decade in the middle there. But these days I prefer gummies or tinctures because I can really control the dosage. I've become very sensitive in my later years. So I need just the right amount of the exact right formulation. So it's just, it's very, very demure.
I mainly enjoy a very, very low THC, high CBD gummy before bed. And loving a bath bomb with THC in it before bed to calm my body and anxiety before sleep which is so horrific that I have anxiety about going to sleep in case I have a bad night.



WA: I remember awhile back I intro’d you to the folks at Atmos to talk about the intersections of Cannabis and teenagers’ usage. How did you manage that relationship with your son? Any advice for other parents?
AJ: Yeah, I smelled my son consuming cannabis in his room at a very young age, you know, 14, 15 and discovered gummies in his room. I felt a lot of contradiction within myself, but he was very, very young. And the gummies I found were an insanely high dose. I was like, dude, this would put me in a coma. I've tried to be just very honest about the ‘here's the reality of these substances. And here's the reality of our family, our mental health history. And I want you to have all the knowledge, all the information. This is not a bad thing and you are not a bad person. And you need to be aware of how these substances affect different people. So let's do these things responsibly and let's keep communication open about it.’
Like not reverting to punishment, but instead like conversation. Though I’m sure the conversations with him felt like a punishment! However, he's doing great. He's a young adult now. And we do continue to have these conversations.

WA: Tell us a bit about what inspires your work today both online and in the physical form? Do you ever use plants to elevate your practice?
AJ: So much of the work I do now is anti-fascist activist art. It is pro-abortion. It is Antifa. Let's be real. Call me out.
Here I am! Where's the meeting? I'll bring vegan cookies!
I paint very angry headlines that I post on IG and Bluesky and apparently they make other people angry too. I encourage people to stand up and speak their voice and get in the street and also be activists. Like, that's most of why I do the art that I do online. I'm trying to encourage people to also stand up and not be afraid or be afraid and do it anyway.
And physically, I make a lot of art card decks. I made the Abortion Trading Cards, which actually includes a lot of plants and abortifacient herbs, some of which I grow on my roof. It’s a way to talk about the history of abortion, the facts of abortion.


My Fascism Tarot is about the warning signs of fascism, and the Grift Deck is about cult tactics and con artists in American society. I love making these series of cards using paint and found materials and collage. These decks give me a chance to kind of bring out a little bit of my gallows humor into my art.
I don't use any cannabis or plants when I'm making art. It's more of a soothing thing for me. It's not a creative thing for me. I know it is for a lot of people, but it's not that way for me. Seriously, I’ve tried it, but I'll just start 10 things and not finish anything.
WA: Speaking of popping edibles and getting NASA, who would be in your dream sweet sesh? Queer icons, people who are living, deceased, whoever.
AJ: Yes! I'm glad you didn't say one person because it can't just be one. So, it's a whole tea party. Jinx Monsoon, Bob the Drag Queen, Monet X Change, and Dolly Parton. Wouldn't that just be the best? That'd be so fun.
WA: That's such a key, oh my god, of course Dolly's in there. I mean. You gotta bring Dolly in.
AJ: Yes. Dolly is an inspiration for us all. All. Everybody. Everybody.
WA: Yes. That was a list, I love it. You came prepared.
AJ: That was the one question that I could remember. Yeah. And I was like, oh, I know exactly.
I know the answer to this. So good.
WA: What’s your favorite thing to do high?
AJ: I love to clean! I love to clean my house. I'm so good at it. I'm so good at cleaning when I'm high.
WA: Going back to your activism, gathering community and inspiring them, are there any groups or individuals who you think are doing the work that we should follow?
AJ: I'm gonna have to shout out Brigid Alliance, which is the organization that sales of the Abortion Trading Cards helps to fund.
They help people travel to get abortion care if they live in a ban state, and they do incredible work. They help so many people. What they do is not only important, but it's very tricky. I'm just so impressed with the work that they do.
WA: Can you tell us a bit more about the Brigid Alliance? Are they national? How does that work?
AJ: Brigid Alliance is a national organization named after Saint Brigid, an Irish saint whose miracle was an abortion. She waved her magic wand over a pregnant lady and boop, it went away.
WA: Oh, wow.
AJ: Most Irish people don't know that!
WA: No way.
AJ: Yes.
WA: No way.
AJ: Yeah.
WA: I have to look that up immediately.
AJ: Look her up.
WA: That's crazy.
AJ: I know, right?
WA: Okay, give it up for Brigid.
AJ: Give it up for Brigid.
WA: So do you have anything coming up that you want to share with community, any workshops or events? And if not, what are ways folks support you?
AJ: I am currently working on my next deck of cards, hopefully to be out by the end of the year, called Propaganda Poker, which teaches media literacy in the age of all this nonsense. But really, people can check out the Abortion Trading Cards or check out my other artwork support at my website, alexandrajameson.art, or following me at deliciousalex on Instagram. Get yourself some abortion trading cards. I give 10% of profits to help fund the Bridget Alliance. And it's a very cool, very weird, very Gen X, very goth girl deck of art cards.
WA: Thank you so much Alex!