Pubdate: Sat,  6 Aug 2005
Source: Olympian, The (WA)
Copyright: 2005, The Olympian
Contact: http://www.theolympian.com/forms/lettrfrm.shtml
Website: http://www.theolympian.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/319
Author: Bill Keveney, Gannett News Service
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular)

SHOWTIME NABS POT-CENTERED SHOW 'WEEDS'

"Weeds" is a metaphor for instant upscale communities sprouting all over 
the country. It describes the hidden ugliness that accompanies outwardly 
perfect lives. And, of course, it refers to marijuana.

Showtime's new comedy-drama, which premieres at 11 p.m. Sunday, covers all 
those bases, centering on a pot-selling mom in the idyllic Southern 
California community of Agrestic.

With no marketable skills, Nancy Botwin (Mary-Louise Parker from "Angels in 
America") stoops to drug dealing to keep up an affluent lifestyle for 
herself and her two sons after the death of her husband.

"Pot is a vehicle for the show," says "Weeds" creator Jenji Kohan. "It's so 
in the zeitgeist. It's talked about in the news, in the courts. It's a 
morally ambiguous narcotic (and) the universal rebellion drug."

It's also something the broadcast networks wouldn't touch, says Kohan, who 
also wrote for "Mad About You" and other broadcast shows. "Weeds," which 
moves to its regular slot at 10 p.m. Monday (and replays Wednesday and 
Friday), also dives into race relations, the latter through Nancy's drug 
suppliers: a black family that gives her a sense of belonging.

"We're throwing everything in" -- the 10-episode series has no sacred cows, 
Kohan says. "I think Showtime's mandate is to make some noise. And this is 
a pretty noisy show."

The "Weeds" cast includes Elizabeth Perkins ("Big," "Must Love Dogs") as a 
perfectionist neighbor, Kevin Nealon ("Saturday Night Live") as a 
pot-smoking accountant and Justin Kirk ("Angels in America") as Nancy's 
brother-in-law, a character of "pure id," Kohan says.

Perkins says her character, Celia Hodes, is overly concerned about 
appearances, a condition that afflicts many and can be a great source of 
humor. She must endure infidelity and illness, but a daughter's weight 
problem is "the biggest crime of all."

Perkins interprets "weeds" in relation to fast-growing developments such as 
Agrestic, where "everyone's striving for a pristine, 
I-am-perfect-on-the-outside look so they can all keep up with each other."

Nealon, whose character, Doug Wilson, helps Nancy set up a business to 
launder her drug money, sees a more direct metaphor: "If people can't deal 
with their problems, they numb themselves a little bit."
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