Uptown Voices
What does it take to go from selling weed on the corner of 139th and Broadway — dodging arrests, feeding your family, and building a street-level business empire — to running what Forbes called 'the Studio 54 of Cannabis' and opening a legal dispensary on Dyckman Street in the exact location where Dyckman Electronics stood for forty years? For Vladimir Bautista, co-founder of Happy Munkey, the answer is equal parts hustle, healing, heart, and community — and in this episode, he holds nothing back. Led Black and Octavio Blanco sit down with Vladimir for an hour-long conversation that takes us from the Dominican Bronx of the 1980s to the Forbes pages to the Dyckman Projects senior center, where Vlad once gave a presentation in Spanish on CBD to an audience of elders who used to think cannabis was the devil. The story of Happy Munkey — from a monthly gathering at 38th Street, to a seven-days-a-week cultural institution, to the Van Gogh Immersive Experience, to the Museum of Sex on Fifth Avenue, to two dispensaries in Dyckman and Brooklyn — is the story of what happens when legacy market expertise, deep community roots, and sheer refusal to quit come together at exactly the right historical moment. Vladimir speaks with rare candor about imposter syndrome in the legal market, the $35,000-a-month green tax on his Dyckman lease, driving cash to the IRS, competing with unregulated corner spots, going personally to every informal weed operator in the neighborhood before opening and asking for their blessing — and getting it. He talks about speaking at Yale, Columbia, and the biggest cannabis conference in Las Vegas, standing next to corporate executives on stage with a GED, and representing not just himself but the 40,000 people still sitting in federal prison for cannabis while companies go public on the NYSE. He also gets personal — about his single mother, growing up in one of the most cocaine-saturated blocks in Harlem, finding his lane at 16 years old, and the healing work he's doing now as an 'urban hippie' who hugs trees and goes grounding in the park as his therapy. This episode is a love letter to Uptown, to the legacy market, to everyone who got arrested for a dime bag, and to the next generation of Vladimir Ramones already in the wings. And it ends with three words that should be the Uptown motto: Choose. Happy. 00:00 Cold Open — Vladimir on overcoming imposter syndrome and owning who you are — we're the experts 01:19 Welcome + Subscribe Call to Action — Led and Octavio open the show, Knicks energy, and the importance of amplifying Uptown voices 02:09 OG Ananobi Day is Official — Led announces it's officially OG Ananobi Day, declared by the Borough President — not making it up 02:39 Introducing Vladimir Bautista / Happy Munkey — Led on Happy Munkey's decade-long impact on the cannabis landscape of New York City 03:04 Vladimir on the Energy of This Summer — Knicks comeback, Uptown energy, and why you can never count this city out 03:39 10 Years of Happy Munkey — The origin story — from a gathering at 38th Street in 2017 to two dispensaries approaching the ten-year mark 05:06 Why This Matters More Than Money — Vladimir on what keeps him going: changing hearts and minds, employing people who look like him, inspiring the guy on the corner 07:04 The Dyckman Electronics Legacy — How Happy Munkey took over the exact location of the longest-standing electronics store in northern Manhattan — and kept the plaque 09:21 Vladimir's Origin Story — 139th and Broadway — Growing up in the Bronx with a single mother on welfare, finding his lane at 16, and why cannabis became his path away from worse things 12:04 Octavio Meets Vladimir — First impressions, stereotypes, and why Vlad's corazon — his heart for the community — was always present even on the corner 12:59 The Dominican Bronx of the 80s and 90s — A neighborhood he describes as the Dominican Bronx Tale — cocaine, circumstance, and 22 arrests later 16:00 22 Arrests and the War on Drugs — How a cannabis record blocked access to universities and jobs — and why the first people in the legal industry had to be the people who suffered 18:00 Building the Happy Munkey Movement — From monthly gatherings to seven days a week, Forbes naming it the Studio 54 of Cannabis, advocacy, Albany bus trips, COVID, and back again 24:00 The Van Gogh Experience + Museum of Sex — How Happy Munkey brought their energy into the biggest cultural institutions — and sold them out 27:00 The Decision to Go to Dyckman — Everyone said they were bugging — Dominicans don't have money, it's too dangerous, there are too many weed spots. They went anyway 35:08 Breaking the Stigma with Older Dominicans — The senior center presentation at the Dyckman Projects, the community board presentation, and the moment an older Dominican woman said 'Yo quiero la crema esa' 40:00 The Man on the Bike — 'Eso es del Diablo' — Vladimir's street-corner theology debate in Spanish — and why that dialogue is more important than the algorithm 41:36 The Brutal Realities of Legal Cannabis — 1,000-foot rules, green tax, $35,000 a month rent, no write-offs, paying the IRS in vans full of cash, and competing with unregulated spots 46:51 Respect from the Street — Getting the Block's Blessing — How Vlad and Ramon personally visited every informal operator on Dyckman before opening and asked for their blessing — and got it 50:53 New York Has More Minority-Owned Dispensaries Than Every Other State Combined — Why New York's legal cannabis market — despite its flaws — is the best in the country for Black and brown entrepreneurs 53:05 40,000 People in Federal Prison for Weed — While Companies Go Public — The stat that left Octavio speechless 53:52 Speaking at Yale, Columbia and Vegas — Without a High School Diploma — What it means to stand on the biggest cannabis stages in the world as a subject matter expert who was never supposed to be there 55:47 Two Years on Dyckman: Key Business Takeaways — Watch your overhead, run lean, and — above all else — community beats SEO every single time 1:00:00 What's Next for Happy Munkey — Events coming to both Dyckman and Brooklyn: Lightfoot dancers, drummers, and bringing the 38th Street energy to the dispensaries 1:03:00 The Final Message: Men Lie, Women Lie, Energy Never Lies — Vladimir on his inner compass, the people places and things fra...
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