Rolling Stone just told the story of how Afroman turned a botched police raid into a viral hit and a First Amendment win. Here is the piece that did not fit in that story: why the song that made him famous a quarter century ago lands harder now than it did then.
Rolling Stone just published a terrific long read on Joseph Foreman, better known as Afroman, and his unlikely second act. In 2022, at least nine officers from the Adams County Sheriff’s Office raided his Ohio home on suspicion of drug trafficking and kidnapping. No arrest, no charges. Foreman turned the security-camera footage into a string of mocking music videos, the officers sued him for nearly $4 million, and in March a jury cleared him on every count. The novelty rapper came out the other side a free-speech folk hero.
We covered this from the start, both the 2022 raid that set it off and the verdict that turned it into a movement. When Rolling Stone’s Jason Newman reached out for the feature, the conversation ran long, and some of it landed on the cutting-room floor. The part that got cut is worth expanding, because it is about the song, not the trial.
The Joke Was Always the Narrator
By 2001, cannabis was already deep in the bloodstream of popular music. Cheech and Chong. Cypress Hill. Snoop and Dr. Dre. Rick James, Peter Tosh and Bob Dylan before them. What made Afroman different was not the weed. It was the point of view. Most cannabis music of the era treated weed as cool, rebellious or aspirational. Afroman played a guy who blamed weed for everything wrong in his life. The joke was the narrator.
That is also why the song traveled so far outside cannabis culture. Different audiences heard different songs. Stoners heard a comedy anthem. Everyone else heard something close to anti-weed propaganda, a catalog of missed classes, missed court dates, wrecked relationships and slow self-destruction. Both sides thought the song agreed with them. That tension is what carried “Because I Got High” to Number One in nearly a dozen countries and a Grammy nomination.
The Song Aged in Reverse
Here is the strange thing about the song. It got better as the culture changed around it. Twenty-five years ago, a lot of people genuinely believed weed automatically turned adults lazy, irresponsible or dysfunctional. Today, millions of adults have their own experience with cannabis, and the public conversation is more nuanced. So the song no longer plays like a warning. It plays like a guy comically blaming weed for the ordinary business of being human.
That is part of why the revival connected. The prohibitionist arguments the song parodied in 2001 are back in 2026, almost word for word. Weed makes you stupid. Weed makes you violent. Weed makes you immature. We have spent the last several months at High Times answering those claims one by one, from the people who built careers predicting weed would destroy America to the New York Times ignoring the real-world evidence, from the Wall Street Journal tying teen use to legalization even as the DEA reports teen use falling, to the pretense that teens just discovered the plant and the weaponized hype around cannabis vomiting syndrome. The data does not support any of it. So the joke lands harder now, not softer. The audience is more cannabis-literate, and the prohibition pitch sounds more like a sketch than a study.
Same Voice, New Target

What Afroman did with “Lemon Pound Cake” and the rest of the raid songs was take the same comedic voice and point it somewhere new. In 2001 he made himself the joke. In 2026 he made the raid the joke. Same humor, different target.
There is a neat symmetry in that, and it is the whole story in one line. The 2001 Afroman wrote a song about being too high to make it to court. The 2026 Afroman made it to court and won.


