Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Spotlight on the Marijuana Industry
Title:US CA: Spotlight on the Marijuana Industry
Published On:2010-11-09
Source:Times-Standard (Eureka, CA)
Fetched On:2010-11-09 15:00:45
SPOTLIGHT ON THE MARIJUANA INDUSTRY

Local Filmmaker Working on a Documentary to Capture the Spirit of the Pot Trade

Five young trimmers sit out on the deck, surrounded by buds, sunlight
and the open air of Southern Humboldt.

The scene is set nicely for local filmmaker Mikal Jakubal, who is
intent on capturing a slice of life within Humboldt County's
marijuana industry.

One trimmer, a seasoned hand who has a sunny disposition and no shoes
on, talks as her fingers nimbly pluck buds and trim them with
Fiskars, a brand of scissors.

She said she isn't a pot smoker and had no position on the recently
failed Proposition 19 -- which aimed to legalize and regulate pot for
recreational use -- but she thinks the work is fun.

"We get to hang out in the sun, listen to rad music and hang out with
cool people," she said, with the camera rolling.

Jakubal said the trimmer -- who does not live in California but
travels to Humboldt for seasonal work -- is a part of an industry
spawned in Humboldt, just as much as the small pot farmers eking out
a living or the big growers who are making plenty of money.

The story he hopes to tell with a documentary he has worked on since
March is the underlying culture that attracted many of the older
growers in the first place -- going back to the land.

"It's not about dope growing. It's about what Southern Humboldt is
about," Jakubal said. "You can't talk about it without talking about weed."

In his film, Jakubal follows four growers throughout the course of a year.

One of the growers, a woman who referred to herself as "J," said she
was drawn to the Emerald Triangle during the 1970s because of its
lifestyle, not its pot.

"I'm a Bay Area girl that migrated to the hills to raise a family and
go back to the land," she said. "We didn't come to grow marijuana --
I didn't. It just happened."

A single mom who raised her children in the area and now has her
grandchildren growing up in the area, J is a medical marijuana
patient as well. She chooses to smoke pot rather than take
pharmaceuticals for her anxiety disorder because of the side effects
that kind of medication has on her.

One of the themes of Jakubal's film is the effect of Proposition 19
on the industry. He said what the film will best depict is how much
doesn't change, even with legalization front and center for the
nation to watch.

J said she voted for Proposition 19 despite being wary of its lack of
protection for small farmers. She said that ultimately, she's glad it
didn't pass, but she very much would like to see a legitimate
marijuana industry.

Both she and Jakubal agree that Prop. 19's lack of success was not
just because of some greedy pot growers but fear of the unknown.

J said she has watched the price of pot cut in half in the last 15
years. But there is fear that if big industry takes over marijuana,
the plant will "lose some of its sacredness, its specialness."

She said a lot of her friends are not happy that she is in a
documentary. They are concerned the industry will be glorified or
that it may not be safe for her to be so "out" about it.

J said she wanted to tell her story and help the world see that she
is just a grandmother trying to keep her modest middle-class
lifestyle and positively contribute to her community any way she can.

"I think the rest of the people in the world have a misconception of
marijuana growers -- that we're a wild bunch, and we're rich and we
drive big trucks."

Jakubal aims to have something produced by next winter, but that will
depend on funding. Jakubal said he hopes that the chance for the
outside world to access the Humboldt County grow scene in a manner
more intimate than what the recent media attention has produced will
attract funders.

"It's such a unique, amazing place," he said. "It's this secret
little subculture that no one gets to see."

To find out more about the documentary, go to www.onegoodyear.com
Member Comments
No member comments available...