Pubdate: Fri, 13 Feb 2015 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: John Jurgensen TELEVISION IS ADDING MORE POT-DRIVEN SHOWS On a recent episode of ABC's popular comedy "Modern Family," the new couple next door to the Dunphy family has an unusual line of work: They own a marijuana dispensary. But nobody on the show seems to care, and when the Dunphys get into a feud with the neighbors, it's about something entirely different-the eyesore powerboat parked in their driveway. It was not always thus in TV-land, where pot has been a long-standing taboo. Even a comedy with lots of jokes about the stuff, "That '70s Show," never showed anyone actually lighting up. While movies and music embraced stoners, they were rare on TV, where advertisers are still cautious and broadcasters adhere to government regulations about social responsibility. These changing norms are affecting how pot is portrayed on television. On "Bones," which teams an FBI agent with a forensic investigator, producers got the Fox network's green light for a character who uses cannabis to treat the side-effects of cancer. Writer Keith Foglesong says, "We felt that there's some good that medical marijuana can do and we wanted to say that." Though the characters visit a dispensary (fully stocked with prop pot) in Washington, D.C., where medical marijuana is legal, the producers opted not to show anyone smoking it. In the current season of "Justified," a critically acclaimed crime series on FX, a gangster played by Sam Elliott grabs up land in Kentucky (using cash from the legal pot trade in Colorado) with a plan to grow marijuana if the state legalizes it. "There's a time-honored tradition in crime fiction of the guy who's trying to go legit," says executive producer Graham Yost. "The uncertainty [surrounding the business] makes it fun for us. You get the sense that legal or not, he's going to be working in the weed world." An array of bongs, joints and marijuana vaporizers have co-starred on "Broad City," a buddy comedy led by Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer, now in its second season on Comedy Central. On the "unscripted" side of the TV industry, reality TV producers are scouring the fast-changing landscape of the legal pot industry, looking for entrepreneurs and other colorful characters to build shows around. Networks hope cannabis culture is ripe to produce a "Duck Dynasty"-style hit. A priority: trying to capture the get-rich-quick vibe surrounding the nascent industry. This spring, CNN will air an eight-part series called "High Profits," focused on one Colorado couple's efforts to corner the pot business in resort towns. Both Discovery and MSNBC have aired shows on the emerging legal marijuana business, with MSNBC considering a second season of its "Pot Barons of Colorado." Last month, CNBC aired its fourth documentary on the subject, "Marijuana Country: The Cannabis Boom." Ten years ago, the pay channel Showtime broke ground with "Weeds," about a mom who builds a clandestine pot business. Now more shows are incorporating plots about the pot trade as it evolves in the real-world. A more low-key corner of the business comes across in the well-regarded web series "High Maintenance," which follows a fictional weed delivery man on his travels around New York and into the everyday lives of his clients. Actor Ben Sinclair, who co-created "High Maintenance" with his wife Katja Blichfeld, says, "There's more of a real-people movement towards weed." Still, some TV networks seem hesitant about spotlighting the pot-smoking in their shows. Comedy Central declined to comment for this story, or to make the creators of "Broad City" or "Workaholics, " another show which features heavy pot smoking, available for interviews. Medical marijuana is now legal in 23 states and recreational use for adults is legal in two states, soon to be four, when Alaska and Oregon join Colorado and Washington this year. In Washington, D.C., voters recently approved an initiative to allow recreational use. The drug remains illegal on the federal level, but the reform of state marijuana laws is slowly chipping away at the drug's outlaw status. According to a Gallup poll in November, 51% of Americans favor legalization. Legalization further complicates the age-old debate about whether drug use on screen drives drug use among audiences. Seeing lots of characters smoking pot as a matter of routine can have a cumulative impact on viewers, especially young ones, argues Steve Pasierb, president and chief executive of the non-profit Partnership for Drug-Free Kids. "Right now, marijuana's hot. One of the biggest dangers of this is the normalizing force, that message that causes kids to overestimate how many people are [smoking pot] and to think they're the only ones who aren't. This is not a nanny state thing-`the more we show this stuff the more kids are going to turn into reefer heads'-we're just talking about the natural progression of how young people process the media," Mr. Pasierb says. TV has long been a lens for society's shifting attitudes on drugs. In a 1967 episode of "Dragnet," a pot-using character (a computer programmer wearing a suit and tie) debates cops Joe Friday and Bill Gannon, predicting, "Marijuana's going to be like liquor-packaged and taxed and sold right off the shelf." Later, a pot party ends in the accidental death of his child. Sales of retail and medical marijuana in the U.S. reached $2.7 billion in 2014, up 74% from the year before, according to a new report published by the ArcView Group, a market research firm. The vast majority of sales occurred in California (49%) and Colorado (30%). Total legal cannabis sales could hit $10.8 billion by 2019, the report says. The marijuana lobby is concerned about the sudden interest from television. "We're working against multiple decades of `Reefer Madness'-style propaganda that we have to try and dispel," says Taylor West, deputy director of the National Cannabis Industry Association, a trade group founded in 2011. She says the organization often plays matchmaker, steering TV producers toward pot retailers and other members most likely to represent "role model" businesses. Gary Cohen, a Stamford, Conn.-based producer whose company Triple Threat TV has made shows for MTV and ESPN's "30 for 30" series, says he is focusing most of his company's resources on the pot boom. "We're in the marijuana-television business now," he says. "I expect to be doing this for years to come." Last year Mr. Cohen deployed an eight-person crew for three months in Denver, where they networked with the movers and shakers of the nascent industry, and embedded with a half-dozen businesses to create a six-part news documentary for MSNBC called "Pot Barons of Colorado," which aired last fall. His team continues to shoot in Colorado while MSNBC decides whether to pick up the show for a second season. Meanwhile, Mr. Cohen says he's developing several shows that use pot in various TV formats. "Getting High with Jake Browne " would star a pot critic for the Cannabist, a web publication of the Denver Post, as he indulges with, then interviews, a range of simpatico celebrities. In the talk show's so-called sizzle reel, a five-minute sample that Mr. Cohen has been showing to networks in hopes of securing a deal, Mr. Browne shares a joint with former Denver Broncos tight end Nate Jackson, who talks about paraphernalia preferences and being a pot-smoker in the high-pressure world of pro football. Mr. Cohen, explaining the pitch for the interview show, says, "When you start a conversation with `Do you want to get high?', you move past a lot of the perfunctory stuff and get down to the stuff that matters." The producer says the concept has gotten "meaningful interest" from a couple networks, but no takers yet. There are big challenges to turning the pot business into reality-TV gold. Marijuana growers and dispensaries, navigating a landscape of legal gray areas, are being careful not to do anything wild on camera. Plus, most of these entrepreneurs are struggling to build a business, and don't have the time to accommodate production crews. In 2011, Discovery was the first channel to launch a docu-series about the marijuana business, with "Weed Wars," about a mega marijuana dispensary in California. But scenes of employees expounding on the therapeutic benefits of marijuana and addressing a pot conference failed to make sparks fly. After a first run of four episodes, the show was canceled. Discovery tried again with "Weed Country" (about growers) and "Pot Cops" (about police hunting illicit crops), but those shows didn't last long either. Though the spread of legalized pot has more networks exploring shows, Mr. Cohen the producer says that many networks still worry about scaring off advertisers, because of lingering taboos and federal laws against marijuana. TruTV commissioned a pilot episode of a reality series about a family-run chain of pot shops (also featured in "Pot Barons") called Medicine Man. "They want to become the Starbucks of weed. That's something that everybody understands," says Chris Linn, the channel's president and head of programming. However, the pilot didn't have enough compelling pieces, and he passed on the show. The channel is currently developing another show set in the cannabis industry. Mr. Linn declined to offer details, but says it won't devote inordinate screen time to pot smoking itself. "It's perhaps more fun to participate in than to watch on TV, so I've heard," Mr. Linn says. "I'm not interested in mining the sillier side of stoner culture. The business side is more interesting to me." When it comes to dramatizing the marijuana lifestyle, "High Maintenance" strives for realism. The series revolves around a fictional dealer known only as "the Guy," who responds to his customers` phone requests via bicycle. His job serves as a window into the funny, poignant lives of his clients, such as a cross-dressing dad and a harried personal assistant. Because it's still illegal to buy or sell pot in New York, the Guy has an instant intimacy with his customers. "They're complicit in an act that is secret for both of them," says Mr. Sinclair, the co-creator. "High Maintenance" launched independently in 2012 as a series of short webisodes, flirted briefly with a pickup from a cable-TV network, and now premieres new episodes for a fee on the streaming service Vimeo. Of course, before there was much TV about people getting stoned, there was a long tradition of people getting stoned to watch TV. And now (at least in some states) there are marijuana pairings recommended by budtenders, the dispensary equivalent of bartenders. At Starbuds, a Denver-based chain with four locations, founder Brian Ruden often suggests Purple Voodoo to customers asking for a pairing for binge-watching their favorite show or just vegging out in front of the tube. A proprietary variety grown by Starbuds, Purple Voodoo is a hybrid of sativa, a strain known for its stimulating cerebral effects, and indica, which is more likely to lay you out. "We tell our customers `indica' [equals] `in-da-couch.' That's how they remember." Mr. Ruden's own favorite show is ABC's "Shark Tank," in which entrepreneurs seek investment from a panel of business moguls. Ironically, the demands of his business often prevent him from indulging in it in any fashion. "Nowadays I rarely have time to watch TV," he says, "or even smoke pot." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt