Elizabeth McGraw, Kelsey Swanson and Jo-Ellen Tiberi on episode one of ‘RHORI.’
Scott Eisen/Bravo
Iannuccilli said the days of buying cannabis based on whether it’s an “indica” or “sativa” are over, as cross-breeding has created such a wide variety of chemical combinations.
His web-based platform called PowerLeaf, which launched in beta testing in March, uses data from the West Warwick-based cannabis testing lab Iannuccilli co-founded with another doctor in 2021 called PureVita labs.
On the online dashboard, customers can select their desired activity — say, heading to a concert, going to sleep, doing yoga — and will be matched with a strain at Mother Earth Wellness in Pawtucket, the first dispensary whose products are available on the platform. Iannuccilli’s goal is to expand widely as he proves the concept to investors and other dispensaries, with a plan to eventually charge the retailers for the service.
The platform will also recommend pairings for “wellness” conditions like stress, appetite, and nausea.
Iannuccilli, a radiologist who previously worked in oncology, spoke to the Globe about the new software, and how he hopes it changes the way people shop for cannabis.
Q: Tell me about your new software PowerLeaf, and why did you feel like it was necessary?
Iannuccilli: The vast majority of consumers don’t understand that cannabis goes well beyond THC. There are other ingredients in the product — in fact, hundreds of them — that vary from strain to strain. And those ingredients actually do play into the differences in mood or the spectrum of effects that consumers get from the product itself.
So the software that we developed takes the individual product that is on the shelf, that is seed-to-sale tracked from the grower, and it takes the lab results that were generated for that product from the regulatory testing. Those lab results get processed by a proprietary algorithm that I built around the science of cannabis, and it actually spits out information that can be used by the consumer to actually understand what the effects are going to be.
What are some of the things that a customer would filter for?
There are about 11 dominant activity states that we’ve identified. It can be exercise, just general relaxation, some people like to use it for meditation or stretching, and a lot of people are using it for intimacy.
Some of these ingredients, they don’t even need to get into your body. They don’t need to be absorbed. If they tickle the nerve endings that are in your nose and your brain recognizes an aroma and says, ‘oh, this smells like lavender,’ not only does your brain recognize that, but it’s also starting to release the chemical in your brain that has a calming effect.
So do you not even need to smoke it?
You don’t need to smoke it. But in order to get the aromatic effect, you do need to smell it. Inhaling is a very, very common method of using cannabis. As a physician, I am actually trying to do my best to educate consumers not only about what product to pick, but the safest way to consume it. So if you’re going to inhale it, you can use other devices like a vaporizer — whether it vaporizes the dry herb or it’s an oil form of the product — to create that aroma without actually having to burn the product.
Does this work for edibles? Because that wouldn’t have the aroma.
It doesn’t work for edibles.
I’ve seen the app Leafly, or StrainBrain, or dispensaries that let you filter by mood. How is your product different?
We are different because we are not going on subjective consumer reviews of a product experience.
Let’s say you strolled into a dispensary here in Rhode Island and you heard a lot about this product, ‘Blue Dream.’ The ‘Blue Dream’ that someone had in California who wrote a review on it could be chemically very different than what’s being sold to you over here in Rhode Island. This platform doesn’t just rely on the name of the product. It actually pulls the chemical ingredients for the exact product that you’re looking to buy on the shelf.
Can’t I just go up to the budtender and say, hey, I’m looking for a strain that’s going to help me sleep?
You can, but the level of budtender education really varies in the industry. We’re very new. A lot of people are very familiar with cannabis, but they’re not so familiar with the science behind it.
In the industry we do see a lot of gamesmanship. And it’s not fair to the consumer, but if something is selling and is very popular and there’s a trend, people are going to go out and they’re going to be looking for it. So it’s very easy for a cultivator that isn’t so sincere to just change the name of something that they think is similar and say, oh yeah, this is ‘Super Orange Soda’ or whatever that hip strain is at the time. And consumers really don’t have that level of transparency.
Some people will say this is just marketing, you’re trying to sell these products. How would you change their minds?
I would say you’re absolutely right, but it’s based on truth.
This is actually chemistry, it’s not just the THC effect. What we’re trying to do with this platform is we are trying to get people to understand that they should not be shopping by THC potency. And in fact, when you overwhelm the experience with THC, the nuanced mood effects that a lot of people are looking for get drowned out.
If you’re able to scale it, how does this change the industry?
It changes the industry by more effectively pairing the product to the consumer in a meaningful way. Think of wine: it’s not just red versus white. Cannabis should be the same way. We’re trying to get consumers to see that cannabis is a lot like wine.
This Q&A has been condensed for length and clarity.
The Boston Globe’s weekly Ocean State Innovators column features a Q&A with Rhode Island innovators who are starting new businesses and nonprofits, conducting groundbreaking research, and reshaping the state’s economy. Send tips and suggestions to reporter Alexa Gagosz at alexa.gagosz@globe.com.
Steph Machado can be reached at steph.machado@globe.com. Follow her @StephMachado.
The smallest state with the biggest attitude is already making waves in the Real Housewives franchise.
Last May, Bravo announced that Rhode Island would be the latest addition to its repertoire, enticing viewers to see what the women of the teeny tiny state could be getting into. As it turns out, there’s a lot going on in the smallest state in the nation.
The arrival of the new series arrives amid the landmark 20th anniversary of the whole franchise itself, as The Real Housewives of Orange County debuted on March 21, 2006. It’s a monumental year for the reality television phenomenon that will later be celebrated with The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip: Roaring 20th special this year.
NCBUniversal’s evp of unscripted content, Rachel Smith, tells The Hollywood Reporter that it was not a “conscious decision” to launch a new series, even though it’s such “an auspicious occasion this year.” Instead, The Real Housewives of Rhode Island naturally presented itself.
Creating a new Real Housewives is a tall task, one that can be birthed in many ways. Sometimes, Bravo comes across a new dazzling location that draws in interesting talents; in other cases, a promising cast member is all it takes to start building a new show.
The latter of which happened with Mary Cosby, the beloved star of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, Smith confirms. But with Rhode Island, she explains that a co-worker took a trip to the state and “was really struck by what an interesting ecosystem” the New England location had to offer.
“She saw people jumping on their boats and going to lunch. It was very visually aspirational,” Smith says, adding that upon some digging, they learned that The Real Housewives of New Jersey’s Dolores Catania, who appears on RHORI as a friend, had a connection to the women who now make up the main cast.
“That then led us to a kind of whole connection of women in Rhode Island that we found through this Dolores connection,” she adds. “We’ve really fell in love with them.”
Elizabeth McGraw, Kelsey Swanson and Jo-Ellen Tiberi on episode one of ‘RHORI.’
Scott Eisen/Bravo
When scouting out new locations for a potential Real Housewives, Smith explains that the network strives to “be representative of the whole swath and tapestry and diversity that is the United States.” Prior shows, and where they are based, also weigh into where a mint series could potentially spawn.
“We’re looking at how many Housewives we have in total, and what’s already been represented culturally, geographically, and how we can complement that,” she notes. Rhode Island has already been compared to New Jersey — and not just because you can drive to both of the states in roughly four hours.
The tight-knit community, family-forward ideals and Italian influences are all clear parallels, but the women of Rhode Island stand apart. Smith herself references one of the show’s key descriptors (“It’s a small state with a very big and distinct personality”) as a contrast, though the luxury coastal setting also naturally made the series optically stand out from other shows in Bravo’s discography.
“This is a show, visually, that’s on water. Living around water is very beautiful and distinct to look at,” she says. “We were all so taken with the visual when we were first casting [RHORI] and learning about the women; Like, Liz lives right on the water, and then she’ll go jump in her boat and meet her friends for lunch. Everyone else [on another Real Housewives] would use their car.”
As the Real Housewives has evolved over its two-decade tenure on air, what it means to be a Real Housewife has also certainly changed.
Rhode Island kicks off with Liz McGraw deeming herself the “Cannabis Queen,” as she and her husband own the state’s most successful cannabis dispensary; Rosie DiMare brings up a rumor that Jo-Ellen Tiberi is a “swinger”; and Kelsey Swanson admits that her boyfriend spends half of his year in Miami with his other girlfriend (and the cast speculates that she might have another boyfriend, too).
There’s certainly a lot going on, but the willingness to bare all for the cameras and leave no stone unturned in the women’s personal lives is representative of what is expected of the modern Housewife (on Bravo’s terms, that is).
“During our vetting and casting process, a price of entry is that you have to be open and real about your life,” Smiths says of the cast’s candid nature, adding, “If you’re trying to conceal things that are genuine, then don’t participate. This isn’t the show for you.”
Dolores Catania, Elizabeth McGraw, Alicia Carmody and Jo-Ellen Tiberi on ‘RHORI.’
Scott Eisen/Bravo
The women of Rhode Island could have picked up on this upfront requirement upon watching any of the other modern series, with Smith asserting that “by the time everyone signed on, they really understood that they were making a choice to share their lives.”
The unconventionalism of some elements of the cast’s lives, too, pulls the curtain back on the life of a modern Housewife.
“It feels very contemporary and of the moment,” Smith says of varying occupations and relationship structures of the RHORI women. “There are many ways to be in a relationship. There are many ways to parent, there are many ways to be a working mother, and these are all the universal themes that get explored in Housewives in general that make it so relatable. And this felt like another iteration of that, where these are real women living, hustling, working, mothering, being friends, living their lives, and without self judgment in 2026.”
The Real Housewives of Rhode Island bared all of their deep, dark secrets right from the jump, and Smith promises that even more drama will come as the season unfolds. “[Season one] is jam-packed with surprising and great story. These storylines around these marriages and what lies behind this surface just intensify, and it just becomes more and more fascinating,” she teases.
The Rhode Island-based Housewives also features quite the reality TV crossover, with Bachelor veteran Ashley Iaconetti making the jump from ABC to Bravo. Some may assume that a woman hailing from another profound reality TV franchise could have turned off the network during casting, but Smith asserts that was not the case. Instead, Ashley’s outside perspective, being the only woman who was not born and bred in Rhode Island, offered “viewer proxy input for the audience.”
“[Ashley is] the outsider, and she can break down for you what Rhode Island’s like and what the customs are and the idiosyncrasies of this group in a way that’s slightly more objective, because she isn’t from there. That was very, very appealing to us more than anything else,” Smith notes. “It wasn’t stunt casting, it wasn’t manipulated. We wouldn’t have gone in that direction.”
Solidifying its weekly air date on Sundays after premiering last Thursday, episode two will shed even more layers of the onion that make up RHORI. “The small town, big lives theme that [comes from them living in] such a small and intimate community” will predictably continue to deliver a compelling narrative, Smith notes.
The Real Housewives of Rhode Island are already off to a splashy start, one that not only compliments the preexisting Real Housewives slate, but restores it to its messy, expensive roots.
“I think Rhode Island just stands on its own two feet,” Smith adds. “It has such a different vibe, and people are just gonna fall absolutely in love with these women.”
Ashley Iaconetti and Rosie DiMare on ‘RHORI.’
Scott Eisen/Bravo
The Real Housewives of Rhode Island airs Sundays at 9 p.m. New episodes stream Mondays on Peacock.
Costco sells 10-pound chocolate bunny. See the huge Easter treat.
Costco sells a ten pound chocolate Easter bunny with over 22,000 calories and shoppers cannot believe its massive size.
Need to grab some last-minute marshmallow Peeps or eggs to dye on Easter? What about that glazed ham? Many Rhode Island grocery stores will be open on Easter Sunday, but their hours may be limited.
While no state laws prevent supermarkets from opening as usual on Easter, many opt to open with limited hours to allow employees to celebrate the holiday.
To avoid any surprises, shoppers should check store hours before heading out to the supermarket on Sunday, April 5.
Here’s what to know about popular Rhode Island grocery stores on the spring holiday.
Most Rhode Island Stop & Shop stores will be open until 5 p.m. on Easter Sunday, the website said.
All Market Basket stores, including the ones in Warwick and Johnston, will be closed on Easter Sunday.
Most Shaw’s locations will be open regular business hours on Easter Sunday.
Check the Shaw’s store locator for your local store’s hours.
ALDI locations will be closed on Easter Sunday, including the Providence, Warwick, Johnston, and Westerly stores, according to the chain’s website.
Most Price Rite stores in Rhode Island will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on April 5, according to a company spokesperson.
However, the Pawtucket, Providence, and Cranston stores will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. The Johnston location will be open from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
All Dave’s Fresh Marketplace locations will be closed on Easter Sunday, a company spokesperson confirmed.
Many Whole Foods locations are open on Easter Sunday, but with modified hours, the chain’s website said.
The Cranston store and both Providence locations will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Customers should check their local store’s website for details.
All Trader Joe’s stores, including the Providence and Warwick locations, will be open regular hours on Easter 2026.
Walmart stores will be open regular hours on Easter Sunday, according to the company. This includes the Providence, Coventry, Newport, and Cranston locations.
All Target stores will be closed on Easter Sunday, according to the company’s website.
All Costco warehouses will be closed on Easter 2026, according to the company.
Although there aren’t any Costco warehouses in Rhode Island, there is one in Sharon, Mass., about a 24-mile drive from downtown Providence.
Most BJ’s Wholesale Club locations will be open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Easter Sunday, according to the company. However, customers should check with their local club to confirm hours.
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