Pubdate: Fri, 28 Aug 2015 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA) Copyright: 2015 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Emi Sasagawa and Kelcie Johnson, NEWS21 Note: Sixth in a series. Series: America's Weed Rush an Investigation into the Legalization of Marijuana PUBLIC OPINION SHIFTING AS DRUG BECOMES PART OF LIFE DALY CITY, Calif. - The smell of cannabis impregnated the air. Hundreds of people crowded around a makeshift stage, where men in head-to-toe marijuana print threw cannabis caviar, joints, and dollar bills at onlookers. "Best weekend ever!" screamed a man dressed in a joint costume. Organizers said more than 16,000 people attended the Nor-Cal Cannabis Cup here in June. Inside a fenced-in area in the parking lot of the Cow Palace, people smoked out of three-foot bongs, tried rainbow-color vape pens, and tasted cannabisinfused gourmet ice cream, all out in the open. Those without a medical marijuana card waited in line for hours for a two-minute consultation with a doctor, who charged $100 for a three-month medical marijuana recommendation. Ten years ago, a large scale cannabis event like this would have been improbable. But the two-day trade show was one of dozens of marijuana-focused events nationwide this year. As more states legalize marijuana, the more it becomes a part of American mainstream culture. Public opinion around it in the United States has shifted in the last decade. In 2010, 41 percent of Americans supported legalization, according to a Pew Research Center report. By 2015, 53 percent favored it. Experts said several factors have shaped this transformation. Media coverage of marijuana has increased exponentially, and the message has become more favorable. There are more cannabis-related products and professions than ever. With greater financial backing, advocates have grown more sophisticated and organized. "In late ' 80s and early ' 90s, the marijuana culture was at a point where there was no place left to retreat," said Chris Conrad, a professor at Oaksterdam University in Oakland, Calif., the first American institution devoted to training for the cannabis industry. "We were on the verge of extinction. "We fought back by incorporating ourselves further and further into the mainstream," he said, "but the further we get into the mainstream, the more the original culture gets lost and it gets replaced by a culture which just sees marijuana as another part of the many different things they do." Changes to media, message Richard Jergenson has collected cannabis-related media for 45 years. A resident of Mendocino County, Calif., Jergenson has everything from Life magazine's 1969 marijuana edition to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws' first 1986 Common Sense pamphlet that challenged prohibition. "Reading these things is like a time machine," he said. Throughout his life, he's watched the culture transition from hippies stapling fliers to telephone poles to marijuana appearing on the cover of prominent magazines like National Geographic and hundreds of social-media sites. In the 1930s, the federal government launched a propaganda campaign and funded films that linked marijuana with sex, suicide, and murder. By the 1960s and 1970s, American counterculture was in full swing. The demonization of marijuana came into question at a national level. Marijuana activists developed niche magazines like High Times and Hi Life to cover marijuana. But most Americans still thought pot should be illegal. In the 1980s, the federal government filled the airwaves with the "Just Say No" campaign that featured ads like "This is your brain on drugs." Thirty years ago, a handful of major television networks and newspapers dominated the message. But in today's world, the public has new ways to access news and information - and gives advocates have a stronger voice. Coral Reefer, a 26-year-old blogger in Oakland, Calif., who uses a pseudonym, has roughly 41,000 followers on Twitter, 693,000 likes on Facebook, and 98,000 YouTube subscribers. Each week, she hosts "Stoney Sunday," a video show where she lights a bong and talks about new glass artists, reviews marijuana products, and answers questions. Companies like Harborside Health Center in Oakland, a leading medical marijuana dispensary in the country, and Vape World, an online vaporizer shop based in Florida, send her products to give her followers. The cannabis community listens to bloggers like her. "This is peer-to-peer advertising," said Patricia Cavazos-Rehg, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine who has studied Twitter talk around marijuana. "It is kind of promoting a behavior, marketing a behavior, and when that promotion is coming from peers, the potential influence would seemingly be even stronger than if it was an explicit advertisement because the promoters are individuals that young people can identify with." Her study concluded that the Twitter discussion on cannabis was overwhelmingly favorable. Cavazos-Rehg said she is concerned pro-marijuana content will negatively impact young people. She would like to see balance in the online conversation and more public health professionals. Some social platforms, including Facebook and Instagram, have taken a hard line on people who create cannabis profiles because marijuana is still federally illegal. But independent developers have stepped in with websites and applications like Leafly, Weedmaps, High There! and MassRoots. The number of cannabis-focused publications also has soared, with platforms like Hail Mary Jane and the Weed Blog joining long-standing outlets like High Times magazine. Mainstream media have jumped in as well, amping up coverage and reporting on marijuana issues in a more favorable light. In 2013, the Denver Post created a "marijuana editor" post to oversee coverage as Colorado became ground zero for legalization. CNN and CNBC have produced series specific to cannabis. And the Discovery Channel hosts Weed Country, a television series exploring the relationship between marijuana growers and law enforcement in California. Growth of advocacy groups Dennis Peron devoted his life to legalizing medical marijuana after he said he lost hundreds of friends to the AIDS epidemic. "Most of my life has been war," he said. He returned home from the Vietnam War "to a bigger war: the war on drugs. Where I've been a prisoner many times over." In the early 1990s, Peron started the Cannabis Buyers' Club, the largest of its kind in the nation. Activists like Chris Conrad and the founder of NORML drafted California's Proposition 215, which legalized medical marijuana. Peron and his network of California supporters hit the streets to gather about 600,000 signatures to put Proposition 215 on the ballot. They collected roughly 175,000. A few months before the deadline, a number of wealthy investors funded the collection of the remaining signatures. Today, groups like Marijuana Policy Project, NORML, and the Drug Policy Alliance work to change state laws by keeping a constant presence in media, offering tools for people to participate, and tailoring messages for each state. But they don't necessarily have the same vibe as in years past. At the Nor-Cal Cannabis Cup, organizers had sectioned off some booths for advocacy groups. People walked past, ignoring petition requests and campaign buttons. Instead, they flocked to the booths offering free bong hits, $100 medical recommendations and that main stage - where the crowd grabbed at that cannabis caviar, joints, and dollar bills. [sidebar] About this Series This report is part of the project titled "America's Weed Rush," an investigation into the legalization of marijuana. It was produced by the Carnegie-Knight News21 initiative, a national investigative reporting project involving top college journalism students across the country and headquartered at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University. For the complete project, including additional stories, videos and interactive elements, visit http://weedrush.news21.com. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom