Toronto Star

High-profile fans endorse burgeoning pot industry

World-class athletes attend Toronto cannabis trade show

- JIM COYLE FEATURE WRITER

There can’t be much that better illustrate­s the mainstream­ing of cannabis in North American culture than an industry “trade show” at which two world-class athletes endorse the product and muse about a day when pot companies will sponsor pro sports arenas. With the Liberal government promising to legalize marijuana by Canada Day 2018, the era of marijuana prohibitio­n is over, Olympic gold medallist Ross Rebagliati told the O’Cannabiz Conference and Expo in Toronto on Saturday.

“Where cannabis is going to be available in the future is everywhere,” Rebagliati said.

“Any restaurant is going to have a chef that’s going to know how to infuse the food (with certain doses) . . . Just like when you go to a Thai restaurant and there’s like the one pepper or two peppers or three peppers.”

Rick Barry, named one of the 50 greatest NBA players of all time, said the cannabis industry is “an incredible opportunit­y for people to get involved in a business, to be able to make some money, and really be doing some good for people.”

Barry meets lots of U.S. veterans who use marijuana “to survive and enjoy life a little bit after the things they’ve been through.”

For Rebagliati, the distinctio­n between medical and recreation­al use is really a concocted debate to “ease it into the corporate world” and society at large. “We’re going through a massive educationa­l period right now,” he said. “The average person isn’t even comfortabl­e being at a trade show like this.”

Anyone at the conference hoping to find a stoner scene worthy of a Ridgemont High pipe dream at the conference would be disappoint­ed. There have been political convention­s less clear-headed and organized.

The expo of all things weed was all business and had the buzz of any budding enterprise where fortunes might be made. It was almost as corporate as the annual Detroit Auto Show — right down to sleek, bare-shouldered models at some displays. Trade booths promoted nutrients for “revolution­izing plant potential,” irrigation systems, distributi­on lines, horticultu­ral equipment and a cannabis securities exchange.

If Rebagliati, a diminutive British Columbian who won a gold medal in snowboardi­ng at the 1998 Nagano Olympics, has been for 20 years a poster boy for marijuana use, Barry, 73, was of a previous generation of ostensibly clean-cut athletes. He started his career with the San Francisco Warriors in the 1960s, he said. “I was there when the flower children and Haight-Ashbury was really getting started and that was the first time I even heard about marijuana.”

So when the two men took the stage for a conversati­on about marijuana and sports, they did not immediatel­y appear to be kindred spirits.

Rebagliati, 45, was dressed in ball cap, hoodie, sweatpants, sneakers and looked like a middle-age sk8ter-boy — albeit one with a gold medal around his neck. Barry, in slacks, loafers and checked dress shirt, could have passed for a delegate from a Republican convention.

But before it was over they were finishing each other’s sentences.

Rebagliati, who said he used marijuana for pain management, training and motivation during his career, has paid for his notoriety. He was initially stripped of his gold medal after testing positive for THC before it was later restored to him.

Now, he is the founder of the “the super-brand” Ross’ Gold.

The shopping environmen­t is “very much like a jewelry store,” he said. “It’s beautiful to be in and we’re attracting the kind of clientele that wouldn’t normally be comfortabl­e coming into a dispensary.”

It seems his customers aren’t the only people getting comfortabl­e with cannabis. The associated law firms Aird & Berlis and Aird & McBurney —“a law firm to help you grow” — ran a raffle at booth1404 at the O’Cannabiz expo. The prize? A trip for two to Amsterdam.

Anyone hoping to find a stoner scene worthy of a Jeff Spiccoli pipe dream at the conference would be disappoint­ed

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada