Mobb Deep’s Havoc Is Opening A Dispensary In Queens. The Alchemist, Funk Flex And Kid Capri Are Coming Through.

High Times
Thu, Jun 4
Key Points
  • Havoc, co-founder of Mobb Deep and Queensbridge native, is opening The Bridge, a licensed adult-use cannabis dispensary in Astoria, with a grand opening on June 6 and 7.
  • Unlike typical celebrity cannabis endorsements, Havoc is an owner investing directly in the legal market, emphasizing ownership as a way to build a lasting legacy in his community.
  • The opening event features a New York hip-hop reunion with performances by producer The Alchemist, radio personality Funk Flex, and DJ Kid Capri over the weekend.
  • The Bridge represents a convergence of New York’s hip-hop culture and the growing legal cannabis industry, marking a full-circle moment for Havoc and Queensbridge’s legacy in East Coast rap.

The Mobb Deep co-founder and Queensbridge native opens The Bridge in Astoria this weekend, with The Alchemist, Funk Flex and Kid Capri on the bill. He calls it ownership, not an endorsement.

Havoc has repped Queens for more than three decades. This weekend, he plants a flag in it. The Mobb Deep co-founder and Queensbridge native opens The Bridge, a licensed adult-use cannabis dispensary at 25-15 Broadway in Astoria, with a grand opening weekend on June 6 and 7.

What separates it from the usual celebrity cannabis move is the structure. Plenty of artists lend a name to a strain or sign a licensing deal. Havoc is an owner, investing directly in one of the country’s fastest-growing legal markets, in the borough that raised him.

“Hip-hop gave me a platform, but ownership creates a legacy,” Havoc said in a statement. “The Bridge is about building something lasting in the community that raised me.”

The opening doubles as a New York hip-hop reunion. Producer The Alchemist and radio fixture Funk Flex headline Saturday’s reception, with The Alchemist scheduled from 4 to 5 p.m. and Funk Flex from 5 to 7. Kid Capri joins the public opening on Sunday, when doors open at 11 a.m.

The move lands where New York’s market keeps heading, with legacy culture and licensed business colliding in real time. For a borough that helped build East Coast rap, a Queensbridge legend behind the counter of a legal shop is about as full-circle as the new market gets.

High Times sat down with Havoc earlier this year. Watch that conversation below.