Detroit Free Press

Pleasantre­es billboards burn Florida marijuana while supporting Lions

- Adrienne Roberts

However the playoff game at Ford Field shakes out Sunday between the Detroit Lions and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, one business is making sure metro Detroit knows Michigan already has Florida beat: with marijuana, at least.

Pleasantre­es cannabis company of Mount Clemens is creating buzz this playoff season with billboards it’s placing along Interstate 75 for Lions fans that talk a little marijuana smack. This weekend? “Tampa Bay Smokes Hemp. Let’s Go Detroit.”

The insult takes aim at the fact that while Florida allows marijuana for medical purposes, Michigan lets anyone who is at least 21 years old use it for any reason.

The billboards, “unify the Michigan cannabis community and industry around the Lions in a cheeky type of way that pokes fun at common terms in the industry,” said Bryan Wickersham, president of Pleasantre­es.

“Everybody’s raging with Lions fever right now, just across the board,” Wickersham said. “It just seemed natural and fitting to try to find a way to support the home team.”

Wickersham and the Pleasantre­es team first thought of the idea for the billboards, which are located on I-75 south in Hamtramck and I-75 north in Lincoln Park, ahead of the Lions play

off game against the Los Angeles Rams on Jan. 14.

Those billboards said, “Los Angeles Smokes Mids. Let’s Go Detroit,” an insult aimed at California’s “mid-grade” cannabis (as opposed to high-grade).

The billboard language went through a few iterations (one version named Matt Stafford) but ultimately, Pleasantre­es kept names out of it to protect itself legally. Although the cannabis

company didn’t expect everyone to get the joke (even Wickersham’s mom texted him asking what mids meant), “any conversati­on around cannabis to us is a good one because it continues to destigmati­ze it, normalize it and bring it to the forefront of conversati­on,” Wickersham said.

The play off hemp for the billboards dissing Tampa Bay and Florida came because hemp products (which are legally defined as a cannabis plant that contains 0.3% or less of THC) are commonly used in states that haven’t legalized recreation­al marijuana.

New kid on the advertisin­g block

Hundreds of cannabis brands are fighting for a piece of the $3 billion industry in Michigan.

Finding a way to stand out through advertisem­ents is not easy to accomplish for cannabis companies in the state. Most traditiona­l ways of advertisin­g, such as TV and radio, are not available to them because stations fear losing their broadcast licenses if it appears they’re exposing children to marijuana. Broadcast licenses are overseen by federal regulators and marijuana is still illegal at the federal level.

Billboards are one option cannabis companies can advertise with because cannabis companies can make the case that drivers have to be at least 16 years old to get a driver’s license, and a certain percentage of those drivers will be 21 or older, Wickersham said.

Wickersham said Pleasantre­es was one of the first cannabis companies to successful­ly make that case and advertise with a billboard, and many others have followed.

Across the country, out-of-home advertisin­g (any advertisin­g seen while on the go, such as billboards and posters) is a growing industry. Nationwide, revenue was $6.5 billion between the first quarter to the third quarter of 2023, a 1.5% increase from the same period in 2022, according to the latest figures from the Out of Home Advertisin­g Associatio­n of America.

While spending from cannabis companies only accounts for 1% of revenue, according to the latest figures from the advertisin­g intelligen­ce firm Vivvix, in Michigan, spending from cannabis companies accounts for about 7% of the estimated $154 million spent on out-of-home advertisem­ents in the state in 2023, OAAA said.

“Frankly, there’s a sea of congestion in cannabis billboards but we wanted to do it a bit different where it wasn’t this call for action or this promotion,” Wickersham said. “Rather, it’s just a message that could spark emotion or connectivi­ty amongst the community.”

While the Lions billboards are the first time Pleasantre­es has found a way to jump onto a fan-uniting event like this, it has found other unique ways to stand out in a crowded market.

The company bought the former Gibraltar Trade Center, a well-known landmark in Macomb County that’s easily recognizab­le from I-94 because of a massive sign with a mustached man in a brown suit, and turned it into a processing facility and dispensary. The company, founded in 2018, also has a cultivatio­n facility in Harrison Township and dispensari­es in Hamtramck, East Lansing, Lincoln Park and Houghton Lake.

Not jinxing anything

It likely won’t be the last time Pleasantre­es creates an advertisem­ent that captures the region’s excitement about a particular event, Ryan Wood, creative director of Pleasantre­es, said.

While Wickersham and Wood don’t want to jinx Sunday’s game, they’re already thinking about what a billboard following a win against the Buccaneers would say.

One early possibilit­y that Wood thought of while driving into work: “Green Bay smokes cheese,” slang for smoking old marijuana.

 ?? IMAGES PROVIDED BY PLEASANTRE­ES ?? Ahead of the Detroit Lions playoff game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday, the Michigan cannabis company Pleasantre­es put up billboards on I-75 poking fun at the fact that Florida doesn’t allow the recreation­al use of marijuana.
IMAGES PROVIDED BY PLEASANTRE­ES Ahead of the Detroit Lions playoff game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday, the Michigan cannabis company Pleasantre­es put up billboards on I-75 poking fun at the fact that Florida doesn’t allow the recreation­al use of marijuana.
 ?? ?? A rendering shows the Pleasantre­es processing facility and dispensary. Pleasantre­es President Bryan Wickersham said of the company’s Lions billboards, “It just seemed natural and fitting to try to find a way to support the home team.”
A rendering shows the Pleasantre­es processing facility and dispensary. Pleasantre­es President Bryan Wickersham said of the company’s Lions billboards, “It just seemed natural and fitting to try to find a way to support the home team.”

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