Pubdate: Wed, 16 Aug 2006
Source: Anderson Valley Advertiser (CA)
Column: Cannabinotes
Copyright: 2006 Anderson Valley Advertiser
Contact:  http://www.theava.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2667
Author: Fred Gardner
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

"WEEDS" (HOLLYWOOD DOES CANNABIS)

The first season of "Weeds" is now out on DVD. Some pro-cannabis 
friends who get Showtime had given it two thumbs up and I rented it 
with high hopes. The plot revolves around a young widow, Nancy Botwin 
(Mary-Louise Parker), who deals marijuana to maintain her bourgeois 
lifestyle in an LA suburb called Agrestic. Nancy doesn't smoke the 
commodity she sells (which is unusual if not unrealistic. She drives 
a leased Range Rover, employs a Hispanic maid, and pays the mortgage 
on a big house. She has two sons, Silas, 16, whose interest is girls, 
and Josh, 10, who acts out in troubling ways (he shoots a wild 
animal, bites another kid) and is a candidate for anti-depressants. 
Nancy, supposedly a good mom, pushes sports on Josh. She is 
preoccupied with her business, which she conceals from the kids, 
i.e., she lies to them all the time. No wonder the little guy is troubled.

Nancy's friend from the PTA, a striver named Celia Hodes (played by a 
very droll actress, Elizabeth Perkins), doesn't smoke pot, 
either.  In the early episodes she is pressuring her 10-year-old 
daughter to lose weight (baby fat, obviously). When Celia finds the 
kid's hidden bag of chocolates, she spikes it with laxatives, leading 
to the girl's extreme humiliation in school.

Equally perverse is a scene in which Andy Botwin -the younger brother 
of Nancy's late husband-engages in cybersex with Silas's girlfriend. 
Andy convinces Silas that his behavior was acceptable and is allowed 
to continue living in the house by Nancy lest he reveal her source of 
income to the children. This "good mom" would sooner tolerate a child 
molester under her roof than level with her family and/or quit 
dealing pot. (Andy showed up unannounced one morning with gifts for 
everyone, including a vibrator for Nancy, his grieving sister-in-law, 
which he presented in front of the kids.)

Kevin Nealon plays a more likable pothead, Doug Wilson, Nancy's 
accountant. He advises he to set up a legitimate small business as a 
front, and she opens a bakery. We don't see her finding the location, 
buying fixtures, dealing with contractors or vendors or any of that 
mundane stuff. Although Nancy has no experience or affinity for 
baking, and is supposedly broke (her home phone gets cut off at one 
point), her place of business somehow materializes.

One evening Doug comes over to Nancy's house, she's not there, and he 
and Andy go into her personal stash, only to discover that a rat has 
found it, too. They get loaded and hunt for the rat, which they 
intend to shoot with a pellet gun. They use peanut butter as bait and 
get it all over the furniture.  They trash the living room and 
kitchen, then crash in a stoned stupor. The Drug Czar's office 
couldn't have scripted a grosser caricature of Reefer Goofiness. 
Marijuana turns grown men into Beavis and Butthead!

In the third episode there's a scene set in a pot club. Nancy shows 
up at Doug's office to make a delivery and he tells her he doesn't 
need anything. He takes out his wallet and shows her the reason why...

DOUG: It's my medical marijuana card. I got a note from a clinic doc 
for a hundred bucks. Went down to the pot store and mama, I was home! 
It's a weed wonderland, Nancy. It's like Amsterdam, only better, 
because you don't have to visit the Anne Frank house and pretend to 
be sad and stuff. See this lollipop?

NANCY: It isn't...

DOUG: (Medium shot of Doug sucking) Yes!  I'm getting high right now. 
You can't even tell.

NANCY: How is it possible?

DOUG; The genius of Prop 215: medical marijuana for sick people.  And 
seriously, who couldn't use a little medication, right? My friend's 
friend's friend gave me the address of the clinic, I went down there, 
and loaded up. [From his desk he takes a baggie full of big 
colas.]  I love California! I can't wait to tell the poker game about 
it. The one buzz kill is you can only buy eight ounces a visit.

NANCY: That's half a pound!

DOUG: Well, they allow you to make two visits a day, but you know 
with all the traffic on the 110 it's practically impossible.

NANCY: Are you fucking with me?

 From Doug's office the scene shifts to the Bodhi Sativa Caregivers 
Club. We see a security guard in BG as Nancy enters. [How she got 
past the guard is unexplained. We don't hear of her visiting a 
doctor, getting a card, etc.]  She looks around in awe to the strains 
of "Ganja Babe," by Spearhead.  From her POV we see cakes, cookies, 
tinctures, buds in apothecary jars...  She is greeted by the owner, 
the smarmy Craig X.

CRAIG (Bowing, hands clasped):  Welcome. I'm Craig X and you are at 
the Bodhi Sativa Caregivers Club. How can we care for you?

NANCY: Hi, I'm kind of new at this.

CRAIG: A virgin? Don't worry, I'll be gentle on you. C'mnon this way. 
The First thing you want to do when you come to the club is check out 
the big board. On the big board here we have all the prices and 
strains, and they do change daily. (To a seemingly able-bodied young 
man entering the club) Hey Billy, how's the anxiety?

BILLY: Awright.

CRAIG: Cool... What was I saying? I got spaced.

NANCY: The big board.

CRAIG: And on this big board we've got two specials today. You want 
to check Out the granddaddy perp, it's actually purple. And today 
we've got a Sativa blend - the flavor, bellisimo. Second we've got 
the Here's Johnny, the king of late night. You don't want to be 
messing with this before the sun goes down, it'll knock you out. In 
the other room we've got the clones... (To a seemingly able bodied 
even younger man carrying a skateboard and wearing a t-shirt with a 
peace sign) Hey how's it going Robbie. I see the arthritis is getting 
better, Huh?

ROBBIE: Yeah, you know it

CRAIG: Cool. (To Nancy) What was I saying?

NANCY: Clones.

CRAIG: Oh, yeah. You hear that dial tone? My clones are off the hook. 
Check this out... We have the most beautiful clones. They're ten 
dollars apiece and ours are guaranteed female. To get you started. 
And over here we've got the food section. Hey, Mrs. Rappaport, nice 
to see you, you look beautiful. We've got your sponge cake in back. 
Okay, go ahead and get that.

MRS. R: Thank you.

CRAIG: She's got diabetes. We make it with Splenda instead of sugar. 
Where was I?

NANCY: Edibles.

CRAIG:: Okay, look at all this great stuff we have: infusions, goos, 
kief, kief oils, hash oils, hemp oils. You look a little overwhelmed.

NANCY: Where does all this come from?

CRAIG: A combination of our patients and some very compassionate 
farmers. Doing God's work.

NANCY: And it's all legal.

CRAIG: Well, we operate under the guidelines of Health & Safety Code 11362.5...

(At this point DOUG enters, hugs CRAIG, hardly reacts to seeing NANCY)

DOUG: I love it here so much!

CRAIG: (to Nancy): He's suffering from depression.

DOUG: Do you have any more Steven Hawking? I want to be wheeled out of here.

CRAIG: Oh yeah, I'll hook you up...

Craig X was known as Craig Rubin when he had a store that sold bongs 
in West Hollywood c. 1996. In addition to playing himself on Weeds, 
he was hired as a consultant to the writers and he provides a 
commentary on the DVD. His cynicism pervaded the episode (which was 
called "Good Shit Lollipop"). Fortunately, he didn't reappear as the 
series progressed.

"Weeds" took a turn for the better about halfway through the season. 
Celia has a double mastectomy, and becomes more serious and 
compassionate.  So does the writers' attitude towards her and some of 
the other characters. In a scene possibly presaging Celia's becoming 
a medical marijuana user, Doug comes by to visit her husband and 
chats with her in the kitchen. He admires her wig.

DOUG: What's wrong?

CELIA: Nauseous. Chemo.

DOUG: That sucks. Want some pot?

CELIA: That's illegal, Doug.

DOUG: Not really. You can get a medical card.

CELIA: Well, I have pills for it, thank you.

DOUG: Ooh. What'd they give you?

CELIA: Zofran.

DOUG: Can I try one?

CELIA: No, they're three hundred dollars a pill.

DOUG: I'll give you four hundred.

CELIA: They don't get you high. It's just for nausea.

DOUG: Wow. Three hundred dollars a pill and no fun?

Zofran is $30-$60/pill (plenty expensive; I wonder why they felt 
impelled to exaggerate.)

In the final episode, Nancy decides to organize a marijuana-growing 
business in alliance with Conrad, the nephew of the woman who has 
been her supplier. He has developed a potent strain that can be 
harvested in 60 days. Doug will be the accountant. Their plan is to 
sell to the burgeoning cannabis clubs of L.AS And in the very last 
scene, Nancy realizes that the sensitive, confident, handsome, 
affectionate man she's sleeping with (a divorced dad, how 
appropriate) is a DEA agent.

The second season of "Weeds" begins this week. Let's hope the medical 
marijuana movement/industry gets portrayed more realistically. 
Prohibition is so oppressive that pot smokers are grateful for the 
slightest little breach in the wall. They're grateful that a 
mainstream TV show would portray a functioning CPA as a heavy user. 
Grateful to have a basis for discussing the forbidden subject around 
the water cooler.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom