Colorado Media Newsroom
October 23rd, 2014, 03:22 PM
From The Denver Post:
CNN’s newest original series, joining the lineup alongside Anthony Bourdain’s “Parts Unknown,” trains its cameras on two Colorado marijuana entrepreneurs. “High Profits” follows Brian Rogers and Caitlin McGuire, “two business-minded, dream seeking, relentless visionaries” working to franchise legal recreational marijuana. The eight-part series, produced by Austin-based Bat Bridge Entertainment for a 2015 debut, tracks the couple, owners of the Breckenridge Cannabis Club (BCC), who are positioning themselves as the first “moguls of marijuana.”
The BCC is a prominent new fixture on Breck’s Main Street, much to the dismay of certain locals. The argument plays out in the docu-series.
Not only do they manage a money-making chain of retail weed stores, they also own one of the state’s largest grow facilities. Rogers and McGuire are focused on Colorado’s resort towns rather than Denver, and next hope to franchise the business to other states.
Profits are soaring: since Jan. 1 when pot became legal locally, “the BCC has grown from a $515,000 per year medical marijuana dispensary with four employees to a $5,000,000 per year business of 30 employees.”
More... (http://blogs.denverpost.com/ostrow/2014/10/23/high-profits-cnn/20259/)
CNN’s newest original series, joining the lineup alongside Anthony Bourdain’s “Parts Unknown,” trains its cameras on two Colorado marijuana entrepreneurs. “High Profits” follows Brian Rogers and Caitlin McGuire, “two business-minded, dream seeking, relentless visionaries” working to franchise legal recreational marijuana. The eight-part series, produced by Austin-based Bat Bridge Entertainment for a 2015 debut, tracks the couple, owners of the Breckenridge Cannabis Club (BCC), who are positioning themselves as the first “moguls of marijuana.”
The BCC is a prominent new fixture on Breck’s Main Street, much to the dismay of certain locals. The argument plays out in the docu-series.
Not only do they manage a money-making chain of retail weed stores, they also own one of the state’s largest grow facilities. Rogers and McGuire are focused on Colorado’s resort towns rather than Denver, and next hope to franchise the business to other states.
Profits are soaring: since Jan. 1 when pot became legal locally, “the BCC has grown from a $515,000 per year medical marijuana dispensary with four employees to a $5,000,000 per year business of 30 employees.”
More... (http://blogs.denverpost.com/ostrow/2014/10/23/high-profits-cnn/20259/)