Pubdate: Wed, 02 May 2007 Source: Vue Weekly (CN AB) Copyright: 2007, Vue Weekly. Contact: http://www.vueweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2918 Author: Ross Moroz Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Vuepoint DROP IT LIKE IT'S STUPID You have to hand it to the City of Lethbridge and brave, morally upright civic politicians like Mayor Bob Tarleck. According to Tarleck, city hall was flooded with angry phone calls after a January performance at the city's arena by California-based gangsta rapper Snoop Dogg at which the D-O-double-G and a good portion of the crowd were--gasp!--smokin' the reefer. "The entertainers were smoking marijuana on stage and encouraging the audience to do the same," Tarleck reported with disgust as he proudly announced new rules that will force concert promoters in the small southern city to consult police before booking an act, researching the artists' past behaviour and consulting venues in other cities that have booked them in the past. Performers deemed troublesome will have to post a "behaviour bond" of several thousand dollars before hitting the stage, money they will only get back if their performance stays within the bounds of decency. "When communities take a stand on this, those entertainers will realize that their livelihoods are at stake and make the appropriate adjustments," Tarleck boasted. "As long as communities just accept that, it will go on." Of course, there is no clear definition of what parameters will be used to judge whether a particular performer is "troublesome" enough to necessitate the posting of a bond, nor is there any word on what particular on stage behaviours will cause a bond to be forfeited. Moreover, there isn't any word as to whether this law will extend to other forms of entertainment like, say, live theatre. If a character in a play commits a crime, will the "behaviour bond" apply? The theatre example might seem like a confusion of the issue, but it's not, really. When Calvin Broadus steps on stage, he is playing a character called Snoop Dogg--this is why they call it a "show." In fact, even Tarleck and the Lethbridge city council admit that it is impossible to tell if Snoop had actually smoked marijuana onstage. All that anyone can agree on is that he smoked something that looked like a joint while mentioning marijuana. But good for Tarleck and company--it's nice to know that the next time a theatre troupe in Lethbridge mounts a production of A Streetcar Named Desire we can look forward to seeing sex assault charges laid against the actor who plays Stanley Kowalski. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman