Pubdate: Tue, 29 Jun 2010 Source: Kamloops Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Kamloops Daily News Contact: http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/679 Author: Cam Fortems, Daily News Staff Reporter Photo: Jeanie Dunsdon, aka Watermelon, promotes her cooking show that uses marijuana as a staple. http://www.mapinc.org/images/Watermelon.jpg WESTSYDE GRAD, MARIJUANA DIVA CAMPAIGNS FOR POT LEGALIZATION Her father was part of the establishment, a fighter pilot, former commander at the Mount Lolo radar base and a city councillor. Jeanie Dunsdon, who now calls herself Watermelon, is also part of the establishment. But this establishment is made up of the personalities who campaign for marijuana legalization and make a mostly legal living from a mostly illegal drug. The self-styled marijuana diva and former Westsyde secondary grad now living in Vancouver has been charged and acquitted three times on charges of selling baking that contained marijuana ingredients at Vancouver's clothing-optional Wreck Beach. Five years later, she sticks to her other stock in trade for the beach, and the fruit for which she is named. Watermelon said she gives the fruit slices away free to children and sells them at "ridiculous prices" to adults. "A girl has to modify her activities," Watermelon said in a telephone interview from Vancouver. "You can only flaunt it in the face of the law so far. You can't live in fear and you can't piss anyone off. . I don't need to be in anyone's face." With her self-described 1940s pin-up looks and pot activism, Watermelon is a modelling staple in stoner magazines such as High Times and Cannabis Canada. She's also a comic, does burlesque, acting, is on a national speakers bureau list and recently became a partner in purchasing a 70-year-old theatre. Watermelon's mother, Mary Dunsdon remains in Kamloops. Her father, Ray, died in 2007. "Someone has to take the lead," Mary said of her daughter's political views on pot and lifestyle. "That's one thing Jeanie has in common with her dad: She's a leader." Dunsdon said it took her a long time to accept her daughter's vocation and views. She had to educate herself about pot, calling herself naive. "I don't use it. I tried it once. I like to be in this world - not a spaced-out world." But the alternative medicine practitioner said she's come around to the idea of legalization of marijuana. And she sees her daughter as leader in that movement. "I'd love to see marijuana legalized. Someone has to lead the fight." With her latest venture, Watermelon aspires to be "the Martha Stewart of marijuana" through a cooking show based on using pot as a staple. Recipes include ginger extra snaps, rum resin balls and no frownie brownie. Mindful of the law, a text message appears before the segments at www.bakingafoolofmyself.com . "It's intended for medical marijuana patients so they can ingest," she said. "It (warning on segment) says we're not trying to promote an illegal activity. It's food for people who find themselves ill." Watermelon produced an earlier marijuana cooking DVD, High Times presents Watermelon's Baked and Baking. She's posted the first few episodes of her latest effort on youtube and has a book in the works. Her mother makes a cameo appearance in the video segments and the production eschews Cheech and Chong in favour of Betty Crocker. The music is jumpy '50s jazz and Watermelon wouldn't look out of place on Leave it to Beaver. "There was nothing really great out there," she said of marijuana cooking instruction. "It was really stoner stuff: What to make when you're stoned. They've got peanut butter and marshmallows. That doesn't represent the majority of the marijuana community, medical or otherwise." The most popular video is on the conversion technique, so that baking has the desired mood-altering affect. "The idea of smoke frightens people. By making it into food it takes the stigma away." Canada's No. 1 member of the public marijuana establishment is Marc Emery. The Prince of Pot is now in an American jail after being extradited for his business of selling marijuana seeds by catalogue. Watermelon, who said she knows Emery as an acquaintance, said she is mindful of that example of pushing the boundaries too far. "It saddened me Canada would do that. It was politics, not justice or morality." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake