Pubdate: Mon, 5 Oct 2009
Source: New York Times (NY)
Section: Business / Media & Advertising, Page B6
Copyright: 2009 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Richard Perez-Pena
Referenced: The Westword article 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09.n909.a05.html
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

WANTED: POT CRITIC WITH SHREWD TASTE AND MEDICAL NEED

Don't look for phrases like "insouciant yet skunky." At least, not yet.

Westword, an alternative weekly newspaper in Denver, has the standard 
lineup of film, food and music critics. But in what may be a first 
for American journalism, the paper is shopping around for a medical 
marijuana critic.

The idea is not to assess the green stuff itself, but to review the 
dispensaries that have sprouted like, um, weeds in Denver this year.

"We want to see what kind of place it is, how well they care for you 
and also how sketchy the place is," said Patricia Calhoun, editor of 
Westword. "Do they actually look at your medical marijuana card? Do 
they let you slip some cash under the counter and bypass the rules?"

Last week, the paper published a call for a regular freelance 
reviewer with a real, doctor-certified medical need -- asking each 
candidate to send a resume and an essay on "What Marijuana Means to 
Me" -- and received several dozen applications within a few days.

"Every time an application comes in, it's like opening a little 
birthday present, because most of them are quite hilarious," Ms. Calhoun said.

Coloradans voted in 2000 to legalize medical marijuana, but the 
dispensaries boomed this year, after the state decided against taking 
a restrictive view of the law and the Obama administration decided to 
end federal raids on state-sanctioned businesses.

"It is the wild west of medical marijuana out here," Ms. Calhoun 
said. "There were a couple of dozen dispensaries this spring, and now 
it's over 100. We just heard there's going to be a drive-through dispensary."

Dispensaries promote different strains with distinctive flavors -- 
there are, after all, marijuana snobs just as there are wine snobs -- 
and some mix their wares into foods like hummus, pesto and chocolate. 
So why not critique the cannabis, too?

"It could well be that we will be reviewing the product itself, 
eventually," she said.

The job posting has drawn national attention, to which she said 
dryly, "This is our dream, to be known as the pothead paper." In the 
alt-weekly world, competition for that title would be fierce. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake