Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cannabis trade winces at ‘p’ word

Calling plant ‘pot’ evokes stoner image, purveyors say

- GARY ROBBINS

SAN DIEGO — He was dressed in a three-piece suit. But Chris Coogan nearly went unnoticed when he dropped by a San Diego City Council member’s office last year to do some lobbying on marijuana laws.

“An aide came to reception and asked, ‘Where’s the pot guy?’ said Coogan, cofounder of Therapy Tonics & Provisions, a La Jolla cannabis drink company.

“He seemed to be looking for someone in a tie-dyed shirt with a joint stuck behind his ear.”

California voters overwhelmi­ng approved the use of recreation­al marijuana in 2016, and licensed stores in San Diego began selling it on Jan. 1, generating brisk business.

But marijuana still carries a stigma that surfaces with the use of old slang like pot and weed. For many, the words evoke an image of lazy, not-so-bright people who puff their lives away.

The image deeply bothers the marijuana industry, which is telling the public — sometimes gently, sometimes curtly — that they should use the word cannabis. That’s the scientific name for the plant from which marijuana is derived.

Many retailers also are marketing marijuana as a health and wellness drug even though recreation­al sales will soon dwarf those of medical marijuana.

“People are taking a more sophistica­ted approach to using cannabis, especially in using the right dosing,” Coogan said. “We don’t want people to think of it as negative.”

It’s all part of a larger effort to normalize cannabis, a drug that could generate $5 billion a year in sales in California by 2019.

The state is providing plenty of help. It enlisted Cheech Marin of Cheech and Chong fame to help show California­ns how to register their marijuana businesses.

The state also ran a YouTube ad that extolled the

● benefits of using marijuana while warning that it should never be used by drivers. The ad was pulled after conservati­ves complained that the ad said too little about the perils of driving while under the influence.

The industry is pushing ahead with normalizat­ion, sparking a cultural war with many baby boomers and Generation Xers who commonly refer to marijuana as pot, weed or grass. Many of them don’t think the drug carries deeply negative connotatio­ns.

They have their own allies, including San Diego-based Jack in the Box, which partnered with Merry Jane, a marijuana news and lifestyle website, to promote the “Merry Munchie Meal,” which will be sold in a handful of Jack in the Box restaurant­s in Long Beach this month.

The “munchie” campaign is a wink and a nod to people who love to eat fast food after consuming pot. They’re the same people who like to stream Disjointed, a new Netflix show that focuses on the exploits of some dopey oldschool stoners at a California

dispensary.

None of this amuses B. Le Grand, the 32-year- old publisher of the Los Angeles-based Edibles List, which promotes edible marijuana.

“People in our industry and activists don’t like the word pot because it doesn’t focus on the medicinal value of the plant, which is what’s important,” said Le Grand. “We don’t like the word marijuana, either.”

Zach Lazarus agrees, and he blames the media for helping to perpetuate old stereotype­s instead of highlighti­ng new markets.

“You hear newscaster­s referring to dispensari­es as pot shops. You don’t hear the same newscaster­s referring to a liquor store as a booze shop or an alcoholic’s store,” said Lazarus, co-founder of A Green Alternativ­e, a cannabis store in Otay Mesa.

Tok Thompson has heard this sort of thing before.

“Language constantly changes. It’s a social process that can cause disruption,” said Thompson, a professor of anthropolo­gy and communicat­ion at the University of Southern California.

“The word gay used to have a much different meaning than it generally does today.

People get accustomed to words. Then the words go out of date. It can be disruptive.”

Disruptive also describes the history of cannabis.

Pharmacies sold products containing marijuana in the 19th century, even though little was known about it scientific­ally.

Things began to change in the early 20th century when immigrants from Mexico showed Americans how the plant could be used as a recreation­al drug. The drug took on a highly negative connotatio­n, with some opponents referring to it as the “marijuana menace.”

Marijuana was criminaliz­ed by Congress in the 1930s, the period in which the drug also became widely known as pot. Entomologi­sts say pot represents a shorter version of the Spanish word potiguaya, which refers to certain wines or brandy that contain marijuana.

The drug surged in popularity during the countercul­ture movement of the 1960s and ’70s. That led to stiffer laws from the federal government. In 1989, President George H.W. Bush announced a “war on drugs,” legislatio­n partly focused on marijuana.

Public opinion took a big

turn seven years later when California became the first state to legalize medical marijuana. Today, that type of marijuana is legal in nearly 30 states, and recreation­al cannabis is legal in eight. Other states — including Michigan — might make cannabis legal this year.

That means efforts to normalize cannabis could grow. It’s the sort of cultural shift that many people have struggled with.

Among them is Virginia Falces, communicat­ions director at Outco, which cultivates marijuana at an indoor plant near El Cajon.

Falces grew up in California in the 1980s and says she “had always called cannabis either weed or pot, with the occasional grass or dope thrown in for variety or to sound cool.

“I had to retrain myself to use ‘cannabis’ or ‘medical marijuana’ in my new profession­al capacity as I quickly learned that industry almost universall­y preferred those over the names I was used to.”

Le Grand can sympathize, saying, “My dad was born in 1949, and he still refers to cannabis as pot, even if I ask him not to. I accept it.”

 ?? San Diego Union-Tribune/NELVIN C. CEPEDA ?? Sam Veenkant with her dog, Brody, stop earlier this month at Urban Leaf in San Diego. Marijuana is legal for medical as well as recreation­al use in California.
San Diego Union-Tribune/NELVIN C. CEPEDA Sam Veenkant with her dog, Brody, stop earlier this month at Urban Leaf in San Diego. Marijuana is legal for medical as well as recreation­al use in California.

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