Snoop Dogg’s entourage includes a staffer tasked with making sure people he is smoking marijuana with don’t get too high and telling them “that’s enough” when they’ve reached their limit, the rapper says.
During an appearance on Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen that aired on Sunday, the cannabis icon was first asked who he’s smoked with who he considers to be the most “lightweight” consumer.
He didn’t name names, but offered that “there’s so many of them—they’re feather-weights.”
“There’s too many to name, baby. Why don’t you come join me so I can add you to the list?” Snoop said.
Cohen then reminded the rapper that “I have joined you and I did OK.”
The host then informed the audience that Snoop “has a guy with him, [and] when he gets you high, who kind of says, ‘Hey, stop.’”
Snoop confirmed that the unnamed person will tell others in the rotation “that’s enough” when they’ve smoked too much and are at risk of getting overly stoned.
You have to know *this* about lighting up with Snoop Dogg pic.twitter.com/zYcBppfKlK
— Watch What Happens Live! (@BravoWWHL) October 21, 2024
It’s unclear if the person is the same Snoop disclosed paying upwards of $50,000 a year to roll blunts for him. Snoop estimated in 2019 that he consumes 81 blunts per day.
Last week, meanwhile, the artist took on a new role as a guest meteorologist on the TODAY Show, taking viewers through a personalized marijuana-themed weather map featuring cities from Weed, California and Tokeland, Washington to High Point, North Carolina and Pottsville, Pennsylvania.
Snoop has had a productive 2024 merging his affinity for marijuana with different business and entertainment initiatives.
For example, as he carried the ceremonial torch at the Olympics and served as a commentator for NBC’s coverage in July, the artist also took his latest marijuana venture global, announcing the opening of a cannabis coffeehouse in Amsterdam just weeks after launching his flagship shop in Los Angeles.
Snoop’s marijuana legacy runs deep, as late night TV host Jimmy Kimmel recognized last year when he declared the artist’s birthday, October 20, the “new high holiday” of DoggFather’s Day.
While he might be best known as a prolific consumer, Snoop has also advocated for reform, which includes calling for a policy change at the NBA so that players could freely use cannabis off the court.
He said last year that he supported the reform based on the “medical side of it, the health benefits and how it could actually help ease the opioids and all the pills that they’ve been given and the injections.”
Snoop has long been pushing athletics organizations to adopt lenient marijuana policies, often emphasizing that point that cannabis could serve as a less addictive and dangerous alternative to prescription opioids.
Image element courtesy of TechCrunch.