Pubdate: Tue, 04 Apr 2017
Source: Northumberland Today (CN ON)
Copyright: 2017 Sun Media
Contact: http://www.northumberlandtoday.com/letters
Website: http://www.northumberlandtoday.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5003
Author: Robin Baranyai
Page: B2

MEDIA HIGH ON POT PUNS AS LEGALIZATION ROLLS OUT

"Dad jokes" abound, following the leak of a planned timeline for
legalizing marijuana. Late Sunday, CBC reported the Liberals are
gearing up to deliver on a key campaign promise to regulate
recreational marijuana sales by July 1, 2018.

Headline writers, always fond of a pithy pun, are having a good
time.

"Clear the haze soon around marijuana," demanded an editorial in the
Ottawa Citizen, one of many outlets to invoke the psychedelic heyday
of Jimi Hendrix.

Regional coverage across the country was seasoned with herb. A
headline in the Windsor

Star asked: "A green Canada Day in 2018?" while the Calgary Herald 
reported "Alberta still hashing out pot policy as feds aim for 2018 
marijuana legalization." A Metro interview ran under the evocative 
headline, "Take a deep breath Halifax: Local recreational pot user 
applauds forthcoming marijuana legalization."

Some analyses focused on the legislative patchwork that will arise
with each province sorting out distribution, pricing and whether to
set the minimum age above 18. CBC Manitoba pulled no punches on the
laissez-faire approach: "Canada's slacker pot legislation could create
interprovincial haze."

And an initiative to regulate sales within Canada's indigenous 
territories was profiled in the Montreal Gazette: "Not a pipe dream: 
Aboriginals set sights on selling marijuana."

The effect of looming legislation on markets also sparked a few puns.
Business pages entered the realm of sass normally occupied by film
reviews and jokey headlines about the weather. The Financial Post
announced, "Marijuana stocks on fire after report that Canada's
legalization bill is in the works for 2018," while Toronto Star
financial reporters quipped, "Canadian marijuana legalization reports
send pot stocks higher."

It's not just traditional newsrooms having fun with the latest
development. Twitter also lit up (so to speak) with punny hashtags
such as #wakeandbake and #weedstock. By mid-week, the Globe and Mail's
Report

on Business reported on an Environics poll, which concluded
"Canadians' trust in marijuana industry going up in smoke." It appears
confidence in Health Canada's oversight of cannabis production has
taken a hit (ahem) over the discovery of product tainted with banned
pesticides.

Normally pun-seekers can count on the British tabloids for some wicked
wordplay. But Canada did catch the eye of the Daily

Mail, which announced, "High times north of the border!" The tab then
moved on to a cover photo of Theresa May and Nicola Sturgeon seated in
skirts with the singularly ill-conceived headline, "Never mind Brexit,
who won Legs-it!"

No doubt we can look forward to greater buzz in international
headlines in the weeks ahead. It's expected legislation will be
introduced in the next few weeks, meeting a target announced April 20,
2016. (4/20 is a popular day for marijuana enthusiasts to partake.)

While puns are amusing, readers have more than a budding interest in
the practicalities of how legalization will be rolled out. The prime
minister campaigned on keeping pot out of the hands of minors. And not
a moment too soon, with marijuana joining the ranks of street drugs
potentially laced with deadly opioids.

A federal cannabis task force chaired by Anne McLellan recommended
plain packaging and strict rules for how marijuana may be labelled and
advertised. Licensed producers argue branding can differentiate their
product from illicit weed.

Canadians are eager for details of a thoughtful blueprint for moving
forward. They won't settle for a half-baked plan.
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MAP posted-by: Matt