James Kim’s Los Angeles-based cannabis company grew from a scrappy startup in 2017 to a legal unicorn worth $1.5 billion. Allegations of black-market activity and lawsuits be damned—Stiiizy aims to be the Nike of cannabis.
Read the full story here: https://www.forbes.com/sites/willyakowicz/2025/04/18/inside-stiiizy-the-worlds-best-selling-weed-brand/
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LifestyleTranscript
00:00Today on Forbes, Inside Steezy, the world's best-selling weed brand.
00:07Inside a warehouse in downtown Los Angeles, next to a strip club,
00:11James Kim, the CEO and co-founder of the California-based cannabis brand Steezy,
00:17opens the door to one of his grow rooms, revealing 972 pot plants,
00:22thriving three-foot-tall beauties two weeks from harvest.
00:27Kim, who is 37 years old and has tattoos covering his arms,
00:31including a portrait of Ben Franklin and a rose made from a $100 bill, says,
00:36quote,
00:37These days, Steezy is bringing in plenty of Benjamins, a.k.a. a lot of money.
00:46The company, which was founded in 2017 and grows cannabis,
00:50manufactures vapes, pre-rolls, gummies, and flour,
00:53has nearly 50 branded dispensaries across California
00:57and generates more than $800 million a year in revenue.
01:02Steezy, which is also California's biggest cannabis retailer,
01:06is the best-selling weed brand in the country,
01:08according to sales data firm Headset.
01:11A vertically integrated powerhouse that now operates in seven states,
01:15one out of every eight cannabis products sold in the United States is a Steezy product.
01:20The company, which Forbes estimates to be valued at $1.5 billion,
01:26is privately held, secretive, and mysterious.
01:30Out of four original co-founders, only Kim would agree to speak,
01:34and he would not confirm the names of his partners.
01:37Founded in the gray market days before California legalized recreational marijuana,
01:42Steezy has also been dogged by lawsuits,
01:45rumors of illicit activity, all of which the company denies,
01:48and scandals.
01:50But none of that has changed the fact that in the $32 billion regulated cannabis industry,
01:56Steezy is the brand to beat.
01:59A floor below the grow room, Kim walks through his production facility,
02:03where dozens of employees in blue hairnets and face masks
02:06brush mini-blunts with a brown liquid
02:08and roll them into a half-pound of Keefe and put them into trays.
02:12In another room, a woman uses a machine to fill 100 Steezy vape pens at a time.
02:19By the end of the day, workers here will make nearly 100,000 of them.
02:24Every month, Steezy grows 15,000 pounds of weed
02:27and produces about $70 million worth, in retail sales,
02:31of cannabis products in California,
02:33not including how much it produces in Nevada, Arizona, Michigan, Missouri, Illinois, and New York,
02:41where Steezy launched in February
02:43and rose to be among the top 10 best-selling brands within a month.
02:48Kim walks out of his warehouse and jumps in the back of his black Cadillac Escalade,
02:52and his driver takes him a few minutes down the road to Steezy's downtown LA headquarters.
02:57The notorious B.I.G.'s song, Juicy, plays over the car speakers,
03:02while Kim tells Forbes,
03:03Kim, who sports an Audemars Piguet Royal Oak chronograph on his wrist,
03:14grew up humbly in Cerritos, California.
03:18He shared a bed with his older sister so his parents,
03:20both immigrants from South Korea,
03:22could rent out the other bedroom to help make ends meet.
03:25After selling weed and getting into trouble,
03:28he dropped out of high school his junior year.
03:30In 2006, he joined the army and later did a tour in Baghdad.
03:35Years after returning home,
03:37he launched Kilo, a nicotine vape juice brand,
03:40with a high school buddy.
03:42They hit pay dirt.
03:43Kilo had $6 million in revenue the first year,
03:46$12 million the second,
03:48and $20 million the third.
03:50In 2016, a different high school friend
03:53who was working in the medical marijuana space
03:55told him that they should start a weed brand
03:57and get ready for California's recreational market,
04:00which was set to launch in 2018.
04:03Kim mapped out the brand and came up with the name Steezy,
04:06blending the skate slang,
04:07steez,
04:08and the word,
04:09easy.
04:10He sank his life savings,
04:11a couple million dollars into the brand,
04:14and with partners who seeded the company,
04:16Steezy was first born as a vape brand.
04:19Within a year,
04:20Steezy built a cultivation site,
04:22expanded into flower,
04:23edibles,
04:24and pre-rolls,
04:25and by August 2019,
04:26Steezy opened its first store.
04:29For full coverage,
04:31check out Will Yakowitz's piece
04:32on Forbes.com.
04:35This is Kieran Meadows from Forbes.
04:38Thanks for tuning in.