Hippie's Dream Car

Motive

A teaser image of the Kestrel.

(Credit: Motive Industries)

Motive Industries, an automotive design firm in Canada, is developing the most literal of green vehicles–an electric car with a chassis made from cannabis.
The body of the Kestrel, a four-seat electric vehicle, is engineered using impact-resistant biocomposite derived from Canadian grown and manufactured hemp mats.
Its construction takes enviromentally friendly engineering one step further–the hemp fibers in the composite keep the body weight low, which reduces the energy needed to propel the vehicle while offering a renewable alternative to composites derived from petrochemicals. Aptera, a California-based EV start-up, uses silica-based fabric for its composite material that is impossible to dent with a sledgehammer, according to the manufacturer.
Prototyping and testing on the Kestrel will take place later this month. Motive’s goal is to achieve a reduction in weight while maintaining the same mechanical properties as the car’s glass-based counterpart. More information about the zero-emission Kestrel will be released in September at the 2010 VE Conference and Trade Show in Vancouver.
http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-20014412-48.html

Some MA police turn blind eye to marijuana

Photo Courtesy of flickr user warrentedarrest Having a small amount of weed might not even get you a fine. Some towns in Massachusetts are giving up on enforcing the law that decriminalized possession of less than an ounce of marijuana. Under that law, an ounce or less brings just a 100-dollar fine – instead of six months in jail or a 500-dollar fine. But offenders don’t have to identify themselves, and there’s no penalty for unpaid fines. Police officials say that makes it hard to enforce – and leaves some towns simply turning a blind eye to pot use.
http://news.wbru.com/2010/08/some-ma-police-turn-blind-eye-to-marijuana/

Free Roger Christie

August 23, 2010 – Hilo, Hawaii
Video by David Corrigan
Over 200 supporters of Roger Christie rallied at the Mooheau bandstand in Hilo, Hawaii on Wednesday. Christie, who founded the THC-Ministry in Hilo where he says he shared the sacrament of cannabis with members, was arrested in July for running what federal authorities called a “large scale” marijuana business.
The situation has apparently mobilized followers of Christie’s beliefs, who see the ministry bust as an assault on their freedoms. During the rally, speakers directed angry remarks towards law enforcement, and the few county police officers who were quietly monitoring the gathering from the bayfront parking lot. After the bandstand rally, marijuana advocates marched to the Hilo federal building to protest Christie’s incarceration.
Christie is currently being held federal detention center without bail, where he awaits an April 2011 trial. In all, 14 people were arrested for their alleged connections to the THC-Ministry.

VIDEO: “Free Roger Christie” rally in Hilo

All Decked Out

Eugene entrepreneur and longtime industrial hemp advocate Dave Seber hopes to make a little history today at Seattle’s HempFest, a pro-cannabis event expected to attract at least 175,000 people.

He will be introducing Hemp Shield, which he calls the “world’s first” hemp-oil deck sealer.

Hemp Shield is coming to market in an unconventional way, but it’s backed by traditional research and development, and marketed as an eco-friendly product.

Forrest Paint Co., a 37-year-old Eugene company that has developed other niche paint products, engineered the water-reducible Hemp Shield formulation, and has tested it extensively in its labs. Seber contracted with Forrest Paint to manufacture and distribute Hemp Shield, which is priced at $35 a gallon.

“In our tests, it outperforms all the other deck stains on the market, primarily for UV resistance — how well it holds its color after exposure to intensive UV light,” Forrest President Mark Forrest said.

Hemp oil historically was used in wood preservatives and coatings until the 1930s, he said, but he’s not aware of any other hemp-oil deck sealer on the market.

The hemp-oil deck finish, which soaks deeper into the wood instead of forming a film on the top of the wood, “tends to hold up better to foot traffic, standing water and other stresses on a deck coating,” Forrest said.

It’s also “greener” than other deck finishes because “of the sustainable nature of growing hemp,” he said. Another selling point is that it has zero hazardous air pollutants and is very low in VOCs, or volatile organic compounds, he said. VOCs can be a health hazard and can contribute to smog.

Something else Hemp Shield does not contain is THC, the pyschoactive substance that makes hemp’s cousin, marijuana, an effective drug.

Rather than downplaying the cannabis connection — both hemp and marijuana are varieties of the cannabis sativa plant — Seber plays it up by prominently displaying a green cannabis leaf on Hemp Shield’s label.

“We want this product to become a tipping point in the marketplace for the potential uses for hemp,” he said.

Forrest said the reputation of hemp is both an advantage and an obstacle. “Our goal here is to make this a mainstream product,” he said. “I think the performance of the product will help move it into the mainstream. It’s price-competitive with other similar products on the market, and yet it has that green advantage.”

After two decades of searching for financially viable uses for industrial hemp, primarily as fiber in construction materials, Seber believes he has hit on something big.

Water-based deck sealers are a $300 million-a-year market in the United States, he said.

“The reason why we focused on decks is because of the state of (the) construction (industry),” Seber said. “The truth is, if you have a deck, you have to reseal it every couple of years, so the demand for this isn’t going to go away. … We intend to market this all over the world.”

“If this works, I’m going to be an overnight success after 20 years,” Seber joked.

Hemp Shield could be the first in a line of hemp-based products that could bring jobs and income to the Eugene-Springfield area, he predicted.

“It’s not by accident that we’re doing this in Eugene, Oregon,” Seber said. “Because we’ve been a center for alternative culture for a long, long time, and we’ve been an advocate for the use of hemp and cannabis for a long, long time.”

“We think our time has come,” he said, with the market opportunity created by the convergence of consumer interest in “green” products; the economic downturn, which has spurred interest in new business opportunities and new crops for farmers; and recently passed legislation permitting Oregon farmers to grow industrial hemp.

Work still needs to happen at the federal level to allow farmers in Oregon and 16 other states that have passed similar laws, to plant their first hemp crop.

That could happen in two ways: Either the federal government changes its definition of marijuana to exclude industrial hemp, or federal drug enforcement authorities agree not to take action against growers of industrial hemp as long as they comply with their state’s laws, said state Sen. Floyd Prozanski, sponsor of the Oregon hemp legislation that passed last year.

“I would be somewhat surprised if we don’t see some change that’s going to allow for industrial hemp to be re­introduced as an agricultural commodity, as it was in the past, by the end of 2011,” he said.

Until Seber can source hemp seed locally, he is importing it from Canada.

Canada resumed legal production of hemp in 1998, and exports to the United States about 85 percent of the hemp seed grown there, said Christina Volgyesi, spokeswoman for the Hemp Industries Association, a trade organization with about 200 members nationwide.

Hemp products in the United States are a $400 million industry, she said.

http://www.registerguard.com/csp/cms/sites/web/business/25198876-41/hemp-deck-forrest-seber-eugene.csp

Going to Pot

by Domenick Yoney (RSS feed)

Motive Industries talks about its cannabis-bodied car – Click above to watch a video after the jump

Motive Industries has announced that they will unveil Canada’s first bio-composite-bodied electric car this September at the EV 2010 VÉ Conference and Trade Show in Vancouver. Dubbed the Kestrel, the four-passenger compact forgoes some of the traditional fibers used in composites for a green car (*ahem*) technology that is renewable – hemp.
The bio material is derived from hemp mats produced by Alberta Innovates Technology Futures (AITF), which gets its stash from Vegreville, Alberta (industrial hemp, i.e., Cannabis sativa L, is legally grown in Canada under license from Health Canada and must contain less than 0.3 percent THC). As well as having the impact resistance of fiberglass composites, the hemp version has the added bonuses of being lighter and cheaper – two important qualities for battery-powered vehicles.
Engineered for a program called Project Eve that helps Canadian firms produce electric vehicles and components, the Darren McKeage-designed cannabis car will undergo prototyping and testing later this month. Hit the jump for Calgary News broadcast discussing the new composite, including footage with company president Nathan Armstrong.

http://green.autoblog.com/2010/08/20/going-to-pot-motive-to-unveil-cannabis-composite-kestrel-w-vid/

Montel Williams Talks About Medicinal Pot

OAKLAND — Emmy award-winning former talk show host Montel Williams was in town Tuesday for a second time seeking information about opening a medical cannabis facility here.
He met with Councilmember Rebecca Kaplan, who said Williams was interested in applying for one of the city’s pot permits to grow refined strains of medical cannabis that he uses to treat the symptoms of multiple sclerosis. He was diagnosed with the disease in 1999. He has since become a vocal proponent of medical marijuana.
Williams did not respond to requests for comment. But in 2004, he promoted the benefits of medical cannabis on his popular “Montel Williams Show.”
He has said that medical marijuana has been more effective in treating the pain, depression and sleep disorders caused by the life-threatening, degenerative disease than pharmaceutical drugs prescribed to him.
Kaplan said that Williams visited in May and again Tuesday because he wants to open a facility to produce and research specific strains of medical cannabis.
Williams told CNN in 2009 that he has a medical marijuana ID card in two states. He has also publicly supported a recent bid to make medical marijuana legal to patients in New York, where he lives with his family. The New York bill would also put the distribution in the hands of pharmacies and define the ailments for which cannabis can be prescribed more narrowly than California laws.
Williams’ talk show ended in 2009. Hefounded the Living Well with Montel Health Association and Montel Williams MS Foundation. He became a spokesman for the pharmaceutical industry sponsored Partnership for Prescription Assistance, which helps low-income patients apply for free or reduced-priced prescription drugs.
His plans for the facility are indefinite in part because Oakland has yet to finalize plans to issue permits for growing medical marijuana, Kaplan said.
“But Oakland is definitely his first choice,” she said.
The City Council approved large-scale facilities last month but details are still being worked out, including permits for small- and medium-size growers.
http://www.contracostatimes.com/california/ci_15846236?nclick_check=1

Anaheim Ruling Could Be Useful in Upland Case

UPLAND – Three Upland medical marijuana cooperatives will remain closed, despite a published opinion filed Wednesday in a state appellate court.The co-ops appeared in court Friday to request a lifting of a preliminary injunction granted by a judge at the West Valley Superior Court in Rancho Cucamonga.
The judge ruled to uphold the injunction and keep the shops closed until the trial.
Upland is attempting to permanently close at least three medical marijuana cooperatives in the city. The city passed a zoning ordinance a few years ago that prohibits medical marijuana cooperatives from operating within city limits.
Aaron Sandusky, president of one of the shops, G3 Holistic, said he thinks the judge’s decision violates patients’ rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
“I’m not saying medical marijuana will cure disease, but it’s a means of treatment from harmful side effects of prescription drugs or life-saving treatments that patients need,” Sandusky said. “And denying access affects their life and pursuit of happiness.”
The published opinion addresses the case of Qualified Patients Association, an Anaheim-based medical marijuana cooperative, versus the city of Anaheim. Qualified Patients sued the city in 2007, when Anaheim attempted to implement an ordinance banning all medical marijuana dispensaries.
The opinion was expected to address whether cities have the right to ban medical marijuana
cooperatives, but the judges ordered that component of the case to go back to trial court for more hearings.They did, however, determine that the state’s Compassionate Use Act, which decriminalized medical marijuana, applies over federal law when cities attempt to ban dispensaries based on federal law.
“The opinion there was certainly not bad news,” said Lanny Swerdlow, president of the Inland Empire chapter of the Marijuana Anti-Prohibition Project. “There was definitely good news, just not as much good news as we would have liked.”
It will be some time before the dispute between medical marijuana cooperatives and cities over the right to ban dispensaries through ordinances will be resolved, he said.
A footnote in the opinion was expected to prove useful for the shops, according to the cooperatives’ attorney Roger Jon Diamond.
The footnote ruled against an argument used by attorneys for the city of Anaheim in a case against a medical marijuana cooperative in the city. The city of Upland relied on the same cases to argue for a preliminary injunction on the co-ops that was granted by a judge at the West Valley Superior Court in Rancho Cucamonga.
The injunction was granted on the basis of the two cases and the three shops were forced to close on Tuesday.
“Footnote 4 discredits those two cases and distinguishes them just as I did to Judge Plotkin,” Diamond said. “I was unable to persuade Judge Plotkin that these two cases did not apply and now Footnote 4 agrees with me.”
The cases referred to were the city of Claremont vs. Kruse and the city of Corona vs. Naulls, which did not involve an ordinance like Anaheim’s, according to the opinion.
Bill and Sherrie Heim operate Old World Solutions, one of the three medical marijuana co-ops shut down Tuesday.
“We really want to take this from an illicit business to a licit business,” said Bill Heim. “I don’t think staying open and defying the court, even though we don’t agree with the court, is going to get us there.”
http://www.contracostatimes.com/california/ci_15846236?nclick_check=1

Free From Siezures, Pain and Prescribed Medicine

By Amy Hamilton

Samantha McClellan has epilepsy but has been seizure-free for two-and-a-half years with no thanks to prescription medications.
By medicating with cannabis-infused foods, the single mother of four children also is pain-free and feels empowered about the future for the first time she can remember.
“Without having to look like I’m on drugs, I can go to my daughter’s plays. I can drive a car,” she said. “I can’t express enough how amazing it is not to have seizures.”
For 14 years, from her late teens through her 20s, McClellan, now 33, took medication her doctor prescribed, Dilantin and phenobarbital.
An allergic reaction to Dilantin caused her temperature to spike to 108.7 degrees Fahrenheit, boiling her skin and put her in a coma for three months. The straight-A student, who was captain of her cheerleading team, missed her high school graduation by a month. Family, friends and her pastor were gathered around her hospital bed saying their good-byes when she woke up. The former model’s skin was scarred with black blotches at that time.
“That drug took my life away,” she said.
A subsequent prescription of 500 milligrams a day of phenobarbital reduced McClellan’s seizures from about 15 to three a day, but the drug left her feeling like a zombie, she said. That was daily life while she raised two children and took on two more children.
Tired of feeling absent in front of her children, she moved to Colorado as the state legalized medical marijuana. In about a year, McClellan weaned herself off phenobarbital. With her aunt as her caretaker supplying her with medical marijuana, McClellan now turns the marijuana into a hash oil to cook pasta, bread and other food, which she keeps labeled in a separate freezer. Her medication is kept at home in a locked box.
“Not that I think my children would break into it,” she said. “I don’t let the opportunity occur.”
At first, McClellan said, her now 13-year-old daughter was skeptical of her mother using marijuana.
The two had a system down, McClellan telling her daughter when she was about to have another seizure. Her daughter rounded up the other children, sending them to their rooms, and consoled her mother as best she could, even putting a towel under her as she often wet herself.
But McClellan explained to her children that the drug could be used for getting high, which is wrong, or it could be used as medication.
McClellan works full time at Mesa Alternative Health & Wellness, a dispensary at 605 Grand Ave. She also is starting a cleaning business that uses only organic and environmentally friendly cleaning supplies.
As the city of Grand Junction considers what it should do about allowing and regulating medical marijuana dispensaries, McClellan said shutting down dispensaries would not be good. That would force her to get medication at a stranger’s home, if her aunt moved away, she said.
Some dispensary opponents argue dispensaries allow easier access to marijuana to people who are not in legitimate pain, but just want to get high. McClellan counters by asking about people who regularly get high on prescription medications “available at Walgreens on every corner.”
And, like other medical marijuana proponents, McClellan said allowing voters to decide whether Grand Junction should allow the dispensaries would have equated to a death sentence for the shops. The commonly held belief among proponents was that a majority of local voters would have agreed to shutter medical pot shops.
City Council members unanimously decided Wednesday they would not put the issue on the November ballot.
“It’s not that I’m campaigning for dispensaries,” McClellan said. “The dispensary thing is a stepping stone to taking my (medical marijuana) license away. If they take away marijuana, I won’t drive a car. I won’t work. I won’t go on their medication.”
http://www.gjsentinel.com/news/articles/free_from_seizures_pain_and_pr/

The Wait for Medical Marijuana in NJ Frustrates Terminally Ill Patients

BY BARBARA WILLIAMS
The Record
STAFF WRITER

John Ammirati needs marijuana to ease the symptoms of his terminal illness, he says, but whether it will be available by January, as outlined by state law, remains unclear.
Health officials must complete a multistep process before the controversial law can be implemented and aren’t committing to any deadline. They have less than five months to get a system up and running that will allow marijuana use for medicinal purposes, yet two definitive questions loom: Who will grow the marijuana? And where will it be dispensed?
Ammirati, who is battling Ewing’s sarcoma and is distraught over the initial plan for legalized medical marijuana being postponed from October to January, said he can’t imagine what will happen to him and others if the drug isn’t available at the start of 2011. He’s lost 50 pounds to the rare bone cancer that attacks his face.
“This delay is killing me,” said Ammirati, of Lyndhurst. “I need pot so I can eat and I’m broke and can’t afford to buy it on the streets.”
But state Department of Health and Senior Services must set up regulations that include designating a marijuana supplier, authorizing places to dispense it and creating a system for patient registry. Once the plan is crafted, it must be made available for public input before being finalized.
No timeline has been established yet, said Donna Leusner, director of communications for the state Health Department.
“We’re working diligently to create regulations that will spell out how the process will work and then present it to the public for comment,” Leusner said.
The legislation, signed by Gov. Jon Corzine in January, called for at least six non-profit alternative treatment centers to dispense the cannabis. Though the law is more restrictive than the 13 other states that allow marijuana use for medical purposes, Governor Christie requested an extension on the implementation date in the spring so authorities could have more control over the distribution process.
Christie supported a proposal by the New Jersey Council of Teaching Hospitals that Rutgers University grow the marijuana and that the 16 largest of the state’s 40 teaching hospitals dispense it.
Rutgers, however, dropped out of the proposal, citing the possibility of losing federal funding since growing, possessing and using marijuana is against federal law.
One of the sponsors of the law, Assemblyman Reed Gusciora, D-Princeton, said he was surprised and disappointed in Rutgers’ decision.
“This is a missed opportunity for Rutgers,” Gusciora said. “Teachers and students could have been involved in studies of pain management and other issues. As for federal funding, Rutgers could have just applied for a waiver. The U.S. attorney general has said he will take a hands-off approach and veterans will now be able to get marijuana.”
Opponents of the plan note, however, that no university or other supplier has received a waiver from the federal government.
Despite Rutgers’ position, the hospitals council still wants the hospitals to hand out the drug, spokesman Don Sico said.
“We’re researching the notion of liability and what would have to happen so the hospitals can dispense it,” Sico said. “We have secure facilities, pharmacies to study the issues and look at outcomes, and are able to do this. We’re still in conversation with the governor’s office and administration.”
Leusner declined to say what facilities or non-profits are being considered as dispensaries.
Once the program is in place, patients with a physician-signed certificate will be able to get up to 2 ounces a month to alleviate symptoms from a number of illnesses including cancer, HIV, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s disease), multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, inflammatory bowel disease, seizure disorder, glaucoma and intractable skeletal muscular spasticity. They will be able to use the drug to offset symptoms such as severe pain, vomiting, nausea and wasting syndrome.
“For some people, marijuana is really the best medicine to relieve suffering and improve the quality of life, especially if they don’t have a long time left with their family,” said Roseanne Scotti, executive director of the New Jersey Drug Policy Alliance. “We know it’s not going to be available on Jan. 1 — it might even take another year before patients will actually have it in hand, but I believe the Health Department is making a good-faith effort to put the best plan in place.”
For Ammirati, 52, that day can’t come fast enough. Diagnosed six years ago with the cancer that forms tumors on his face, he has endured 28 hours of reconstructive surgery and five rounds of chemotherapy. Just as he did when he was receiving chemo treatments, Ammirati said he needs marijuana to help stoke his hunger and quash his constant nausea.
“I know if I could eat I would feel stronger,” Ammirati said. “The marijuana also takes away a lot of my pain — these tumors under my skin are the size of jawbreakers and my stomach lining was ripped during chemo, so I have a lot of pain. This is not for my amusement — when I inhale it eases my pain immediately.”
John Ammirati of Lyndhurst, was diagnosed with bone cancer six years ago and has lost 50 pounds.  He says the best thing to stimulate his appetite and suppress his pain is marijuana.

KEVIN R.WEXLER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
John Ammirati of Lyndhurst, was diagnosed with bone cancer six years ago and has lost 50 pounds. He says the best thing to stimulate his appetite and suppress his pain is marijuana.

Health officials must complete a multistep process before the controversial law can be implemented and aren’t committing to any deadline. They have less than five months to get a system up and running that will allow marijuana use for medicinal purposes, yet two definitive questions loom: Who will grow the marijuana? And where will it be dispensed?
Ammirati, who is battling Ewing’s sarcoma and is distraught over the initial plan for legalized medical marijuana being postponed from October to January, said he can’t imagine what will happen to him and others if the drug isn’t available at the start of 2011. He’s lost 50 pounds to the rare bone cancer that attacks his face.
“This delay is killing me,” said Ammirati, of Lyndhurst. “I need pot so I can eat and I’m broke and can’t afford to buy it on the streets.”

Slow Going
Legislation approving at least six non-profit alternative treatment centers to dispense medical marijuana in New Jersey was approved in January. The implementation date has been delayed until January 2011. Before the law goes into effect, the State Department of Health and Senior Services must:
* Set up regulations that include designating a marijuana supplier.
* Authorize places to dispense marijuana.
* Create a system for patient registry.
* Once the plan is crafted, it will be subject to public input before it’s finalized.

But state Department of Health and Senior Services must set up regulations that include designating a marijuana supplier, authorizing places to dispense it and creating a system for patient registry. Once the plan is crafted, it must be made available for public input before being finalized.
No timeline has been established yet, said Donna Leusner, director of communications for the state Health Department.
“We’re working diligently to create regulations that will spell out how the process will work and then present it to the public for comment,” Leusner said.
The legislation, signed by Gov. Jon Corzine in January, called for at least six non-profit alternative treatment centers to dispense the cannabis. Though the law is more restrictive than the 13 other states that allow marijuana use for medical purposes, Governor Christie requested an extension on the implementation date in the spring so authorities could have more control over the distribution process.
Christie supported a proposal by the New Jersey Council of Teaching Hospitals that Rutgers University grow the marijuana and that the 16 largest of the state’s 40 teaching hospitals dispense it.
Rutgers, however, dropped out of the proposal, citing the possibility of losing federal funding since growing, possessing and using marijuana is against federal law.
One of the sponsors of the law, Assemblyman Reed Gusciora, D-Princeton, said he was surprised and disappointed in Rutgers’ decision.
“This is a missed opportunity for Rutgers,” Gusciora said. “Teachers and students could have been involved in studies of pain management and other issues. As for federal funding, Rutgers could have just applied for a waiver. The U.S. attorney general has said he will take a hands-off approach and veterans will now be able to get marijuana.”
Opponents of the plan note, however, that no university or other supplier has received a waiver from the federal government.
Despite Rutgers’ position, the hospitals council still wants the hospitals to hand out the drug, spokesman Don Sico said.
“We’re researching the notion of liability and what would have to happen so the hospitals can dispense it,” Sico said. “We have secure facilities, pharmacies to study the issues and look at outcomes, and are able to do this. We’re still in conversation with the governor’s office and administration.”
Leusner declined to say what facilities or non-profits are being considered as dispensaries.
Once the program is in place, patients with a physician-signed certificate will be able to get up to 2 ounces a month to alleviate symptoms from a number of illnesses including cancer, HIV, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s disease), multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, inflammatory bowel disease, seizure disorder, glaucoma and intractable skeletal muscular spasticity. They will be able to use the drug to offset symptoms such as severe pain, vomiting, nausea and wasting syndrome.
“For some people, marijuana is really the best medicine to relieve suffering and improve the quality of life, especially if they don’t have a long time left with their family,” said Roseanne Scotti, executive director of the New Jersey Drug Policy Alliance. “We know it’s not going to be available on Jan. 1 — it might even take another year before patients will actually have it in hand, but I believe the Health Department is making a good-faith effort to put the best plan in place.”
For Ammirati, 52, that day can’t come fast enough. Diagnosed six years ago with the cancer that forms tumors on his face, he has endured 28 hours of reconstructive surgery and five rounds of chemotherapy. Just as he did when he was receiving chemo treatments, Ammirati said he needs marijuana to help stoke his hunger and quash his constant nausea.
“I know if I could eat I would feel stronger,” Ammirati said. “The marijuana also takes away a lot of my pain — these tumors under my skin are the size of jawbreakers and my stomach lining was ripped during chemo, so I have a lot of pain. This is not for my amusement — when I inhale it eases my pain immediately.”
http://www.northjersey.com/news/health/100961804_Wait_for_medical_marijuana_continues.html

Smoke Screen

Made in 1936, Reefer Madness owes much of its current fame to its rediscovery in the 1960s. That’s because Louis J. Gasnier’s film (properly titled Tell Your Children) is so incredibly, laughably wrong about the effects of marijuana. The movie shows us wholesome, soda-sipping American kids turning into demented, suicidal nymphomaniacs after just one hit of the weed. No wonder the flower children of the ’60s held up the movie as Exhibit A of how stupid and wrong The Man was about marijuana. big_ticket_1
Actually, the origins of the movie are far more cynical. Most Hollywood films of the time obeyed the Hays Production Code, which enforced a strict set of rules on elements that movies could not show. However, movies that were supposedly made for public service were allowed to show much more violence, sex, and drug use. Reefer Madness made a pile of cash because ticket-buyers could see all this stuff that they couldn’t see in Hollywood movies and then pretend that they were attending for educational purposes. Good old-fashioned hypocrisy in action!
The original film spawned a stage musical, which then became an enjoyable made-for-TV production on Showtime four years ago. However, Mystery Science Theater’s creators are screening the original film with their own inimitable commentary. It will screen widely this Thursday, with an encore presentation at two theaters on Tuesday.

Reefer Madness screens at various locations. See Calendar for details. Tickets are $12.50. Call 213-639-6166.

http://www.fwweekly.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4017:smoke-screen&catid=86:big-ticket&Itemid=530