Honeysuckle Media, Inc. is an American media company founded by Ronit Pinto and based in New York which publishes print and digital content. It blends journalism and film, spotlighting those who shape culture and set trends. Known for cannabis coverage and advocacy, Honeysuckle achieved major milestones, including groundbreaking Times Square campaigns. Its print, digital, and creative are nationally distributed in legal and traditional markets.
Honeysuckle was founded in 2013 by filmmaker, journalist and publisher Ronit Pinto. Then based in Detroit, the publication was digital-only and centered on provocative arts, culture, and film. After the relocation of its headquarters to New York, Honeysuckle began publishing print editions in 2015, the first featuring a Detroit punk artist. Subsequent print and digital platform expansion led to national and international distribution by 2018. At the same time, the brand garnered attention for its coverage of the legal cannabis industry and legalization movements.
In 2021, Green Market Report named Honeysuckle among the top Cannabis Print Publications.
Notable features have included Spike Lee, Leonardo DiCaprio, Alan Cumming, Kirsten Dunst, Holly Hunter, Laganja Estranja, Congressman John Lewis, and veteran cannabis advocates Steve and Andrew DeAngelo, as well as the last interview of adult film performer Candida Royalle.
Honeysuckle regularly publishes first-person accounts from marginalized communities and incarcerated or formerly incarcerated citizens. Several stories have examined conditions within the American criminal justice system. In 2020, Honeysuckle published an article on the case of California inmate DaReta Gail Steverson, who suffered from leukemia and COVID-19 and was deemed ineligible for parole despite her need of medical treatment.
A 2021 article on racial bias in the case of Matthew Baker Jr., a 23-year-old Georgia man facing the death penalty for a quadruple homicide known as the âÂÂBonfire Killings,â pointed to a claimed lack of evidence tying Baker to the murders. Journalist Kalyn Womack reported regularly on Baker's case for Honeysuckle from 2021 to 2024, helping to bring national attention and public sympathy to the defendant. On May 20, 2024, Baker was found not guilty on all 30 counts.
Honeysuckle's coverage of formerly incarcerated people has included some of the longest-serving prisoners for cannabis sentences in the United States, including Michael Thompson, Richard DeLisi, and Corvain Cooper.
In May 2021, the Washington State Department of Corrections banned a copy of HoneysuckleâÂÂs 420 print edition from being delivered to an inmate on the grounds that the magazineâÂÂs cannabis content violated the institutionâÂÂs mail policy.
On June 16, 2024, the company's founders, Sam Long and Ronit Pinto, were involved in a violent altercation with three women on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Footage of the incident was subsequently posted to social media.
Due to the incident, Cannabiziac, a cannabis brand, removed Pinto from their advisory board. The Travel Agency, a New York cannabis chain, also "sever[ed] all ties with Honeysuckle Magazine."
Honeysuckle has spearheaded numerous initiatives to educate mainstream culture about the cannabis and hemp industries. The company launched the first campaign to display cannabis brands on Times Square billboards for the first time in history on December 31, 2018. Fifteen partner brands were featured, including Dasheeda Dawson of The WeedHeadâ¢, the first African American owner of a cannabis company to be showcased in that space. In 2021, in partnership with rapper Lil WayneâÂÂs cannabis brand GKUA, Honeysuckle highlighted six women-owned companies on Times SquareâÂÂs Thomson Reuters board. Featuring all-female and BIPOC brands and honoring the 50th anniversary of National Cannabis Day, the campaign included Idaho-based Tribal Hemp & Cannabis Magazine from the Indigenous Cannabis Coalition and Ontario-based Legacy 420, a First Nations retailer.
Billboard Campaigns
Since 2018, Honeysuckle has spearheaded various billboard campaigns in Times Square and other locations that have furthered cannabis and human rights causes in notable ways.
Clio Cannabis Awards
Other awards
Honeysuckle's social justice reportage received a New York State Assembly Citation from Assemblymember Inez E. Dickens of the 70th District, for "significant contribution to the culture and community" of New York City. The publication also received a New York State Senate Citation in 2019 from then-Senator Brian Benjamin of the state's 30th District for taking "a progressive stance on social and economic issues."