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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Using Marijuana Stores to Market Food
Title:US: Using Marijuana Stores to Market Food
Published On:2009-11-05
Source:New York Times (NY)
Fetched On:2009-11-05 15:20:35
USING MARIJUANA STORES TO MARKET FOOD

AFTER Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. announced in March that he
would end the Bush administration practice of frequently raiding
medical marijuana dispensaries, the dispensaries have been growing,
appropriately enough, like weeds.

Among the 14 states with medical marijuana laws, Colorado has
experienced particularly brisk growth in the stores. From fewer than
two dozen dispensaries in the state in January, there are now more
than 60 just in Denver and nearby Boulder, and more than 10,000
registered medical marijuana patients statewide, according to reports
in Westword, a Denver alternative weekly.

When Westword announced recently that it would hire a registered
patient to write reviews of the dispensaries (for a column called
"Mile Highs and Lows"), it received 400 applications, according to
Patricia Calhoun, its editor. And dispensary owners -- called
ganjapreneurs in a recent headline in the weekly -- are placing ads,
accounting for nearly seven pages of advertising in a recent 92-page issue.

Now a business that has nothing to do with cannabis is aiming its ads
at medical marijuana patients. A new print ad -- by TDA Advertising
and Design of Boulder -- for Hapa Sushi, a restaurant chain based in
Boulder, features a map of Denver and Boulder with 63 dots. Four dots
are red, representing the four Hapa locations, and the remaining 59
are blue, representing medical marijuana dispensaries, some of which,
it turns out, are just a stone's throw from the restaurants. The ad
was to appear Thursday in the Denver/Boulder edition of The Onion and
in Westword later in the month.

"We're just kind of saying, 'Look, these dispensaries exist and
they're becoming part of our community, so let's welcome them in and
have some fun,'" said Mark Van Grack, owner of Hapa Sushi, a
privately held, 10-year-old chain. "If you're going to smoke pot,
you're going to get the munchies, so come to Hapa to eat."

As in most Hapa advertising over the years, something is
conspicuously absent from these ads: food.

"Most restaurants show food, but then you're just one of a hundred,"
Mr. Van Grack said. "We think that our clientele appreciates smart
ads that grab their attention. By creating ads that people want to
talk about, that are creative and maybe controversial, then at least
they are talking about our ads and Hapa is top of mind."

Jonathan Schoenberg, the creative director at TDA, said of the Hapa
ads, "We try to keep these guys in a culturally significant place."

In 2007, when Barry Bonds hit his 755th home run to tie Hank Aaron's
record (which Bonds soon broke), the agency created a Hapa print ad
that alluded to allegations of steroid use by Bonds.

"Congratulations Hank Aaron on 755 home runs," the ad declared.
Smaller print below added, "Organic beef and chicken, no added
steroids." An Associated Press wire story about the ad was reprinted
in publications throughout the country, and some readers were not amused.

"I had some guy from San Francisco call me every day for a week
because he was offended by the ad," said Mr. Schoenberg. "But he
lived in San Francisco, so we didn't care."

Mr. Van Grack, Hapa's owner, recently came up with a marketing stunt
on his own, with no help from his agency.

Last month, Boulder's police chief, Mark Beckner, announced a
crackdown on a 10-year-old tradition, the Naked Pumpkin Run, in which
as many as 100 runners wearing only footwear and pumpkins over their
heads streak through the city. The chief said participants would be
arrested and charged as sex offenders, a threat that had teeth
because a dozen runners were arrested last year.

In response, Mr. Van Grack had about 100 pairs of orange briefs and
thongs printed with the Hapa logo and the words "Run Responsibly."
Restaurant representatives stationed along the streaking route on
Halloween night planned to distribute them.

Only three runners took part, however, and they had already heeded
the police and wore skimpy bottoms.

But while the runners were not exposed, the restaurant got plenty of
exposure. The Wall Street Journal mentioned Hapa Sushi in a
front-page article about the Naked Pumpkin Run hubbub. The restaurant
also was named on Web sites including The Huffington Post, not to
mention local television and print coverage.

"We salute Hapa owner Mark Van Grack, who clearly knows when to serve
things raw -- and when to take cover," Ms. Calhoun, the newspaper
editor, wrote in a blog post on Westword.com.
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