Maureen Dowd’s Bad Trip Inspires ‘Candy Bar’ Ads By Pot Advocates

This September 2014 image, provided by the Marijuana Policy Project, (MPP), is to appear on a billboard in Denver to promote what MPP says is the first marijuana-related ad campaign that encourages adults to consume ... This September 2014 image, provided by the Marijuana Policy Project, (MPP), is to appear on a billboard in Denver to promote what MPP says is the first marijuana-related ad campaign that encourages adults to consume it responsibly in states where it is legal, such as Colorado. (AP Photo/Marijuana Policy Project) MORE LESS
Start your day with TPM.
Sign up for the Morning Memo newsletter

DENVER (AP) — Tired of Cheech & Chong pot jokes and ominous anti-drug campaigns, the marijuana industry and activists are starting an ad blitz in Colorado aimed at promoting moderation and the safe consumption of pot.

To get their message across, they are skewering some of the old Drug War-era ads that focused on the fears of marijuana, including the famous “This is your brain on drugs” fried-egg ad from the 1980s.

They are planning posters, brochures, billboards and magazine ads to caution consumers to use the drug responsibly and warn tourists and first-timers about the potential to get sick from accidentally eating too much medical-grade pot.

“So far, every campaign designed to educate the public about marijuana has relied on fear-mongering and insulting marijuana users,” said Mason Tvert, spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project, the nation’s biggest pot-policy advocacy group.

The MPP plans to unveil a billboard on Wednesday on a west Denver street where many pot shops are located that shows a woman slumped in a hotel room with the tagline: “Don’t let a candy bar ruin your vacation.”

It’s an allusion to Maureen Dowd, a New York Times columnist who got sick from eating one on a visit to write about pot.

The campaign is a direct response to the state’s post-legalization marijuana-education efforts.

One of them is intended to prevent stoned driving and shows men zoning out while trying to play basketball, light a grill or hang a television. Many in the industry said the ads showed stereotypical stoners instead of average adults.

Even more concerning to activists is a youth-education campaign that relies on a human-sized cage and the message, “Don’t Be a Lab Rat,” along with warnings about pot and developing brains.

The cage in Denver has been repeatedly vandalized. At least one school district rejected the traveling exhibit, saying it was well-intentioned but inappropriate.

“To me, that’s not really any different than Nancy Reagan saying ‘Just Say No,'” said Tim Cullen, co-owner of four marijuana dispensaries and a critic of the “lab rat” campaign, referring to the former first lady’s effort to combat drug use.

A spokesman for the state Health Department welcomed the industry’s ads, and defended the “lab rat” campaign. “It’s been effective in starting a conversation about potential risks to youth from marijuana,” Mark Salley said.

The dueling campaigns come at a time when the industry is concerned about inexperienced consumers using edible pot. The popularity of edibles surprised some in the industry when legal-marijuana retail sales began in January.

Edible pot products have been blamed for at least one death, of a college student who jumped to his death in Denver in March after consuming six times the recommended dose of edible marijuana.

The headlines, including Dowd’s experience, have been enough for the industry to promote moderation with edible pot.

“I think the word has gotten out that you need to be careful with edibles,” said Steve Fox, head of the Denver-based Council for Responsible Cannabis Regulation.

The group organized the “First Time 5” campaign, which cautions that new users shouldn’t eat more than 5 milligrams of marijuana’s psychoactive ingredient, or half a suggested serving.

The campaign warns users that edible pot can be much more potent than the marijuana they’re smoking — and that the pot-infused treats on store shelves are much stronger than homemade brownies they may recall eating.

The advocacy ads tackle anti-drug messaging from year past.

Inside pictures of old TV sets are images from historic ads. Along with the fried-egg one is an image from one ad of a father finding his son’s drug stash and demanding to know who taught him to use it.

The kid answers: “You, all right! I learned it by watching you!”

The print ad concludes, “Decades of fear-mongering and condescending anti-marijuana ads have not taught us anything about the substance or made anyone safer.”

It then directs viewers to consumeresposibly.org, which is patterned after the alcohol industry’s “Drink Responsibly” campaign.

Marijuana activists plan to spend $75,000 by year’s end and eventually expand it to Washington state, where pot is also legal.

___

Kristen Wyatt can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/APkristenwyatt

___

Online:

http://www.consumeresponsibly.org

http://www.firsttime5.com

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Latest News

Notable Replies

  1. It’s the edible pot industry which makes candy bars with 23 doses each.

    They’re being irresponsible by putting multiple doses in one candy bar. They should focus on one-dose-per-bar instead of telling consumers to be responsible.

    A man in Wisconsin, Jason N. Hetke, is being prosecuted because he got a pot candy bar in Colorado and brought it home and put it in his dresser. His 15 year old daughter took it from his dresser and ate it at school. She collapsed since it had 23 doses.

  2. What a wonderful idea to resurrect those hilarious old ads and recycle them! Let me be the first to coin a political ad phrase to be used against conservative hyperfreakish fear mongering:

    This is your brain. This is your brain on dregs. Don’t vote based on conservative suicide disinformation policies - Just Say KNOW!

  3. Avatar for dbutch dbutch says:

    There’s a lot of hype in the story - including claims that “she almost
    died”. Nope - she got pretty seriously stoned - nowhere near death.
    Now, if she’d consumed the equivalent overdose of alcohol - she
    would be in a lot more trouble.

  4. Avatar for jep07 jep07 says:

    But are the lab rats happy?

  5. Avatar for jep07 jep07 says:

    How hard was it to find a MoDo duplicate?

Continue the discussion at forums.talkingpointsmemo.com

13 more replies

Participants

Avatar for system1 Avatar for agio Avatar for jep07 Avatar for firstprime Avatar for cwazycajun Avatar for buford Avatar for mantan Avatar for eastlansing Avatar for eric_jaffa Avatar for 538liberal Avatar for c6Logic Avatar for dbutch Avatar for pokums Avatar for Zanzibar

Continue Discussion
Masthead Masthead
Founder & Editor-in-Chief:
Executive Editor:
Managing Editor:
Deputy Editor:
Editor at Large:
General Counsel:
Publisher:
Head of Product:
Director of Technology:
Associate Publisher:
Front End Developer:
Senior Designer: