News (Media Awareness Project) - US DC: Got A Blight? |
Title: | US DC: Got A Blight? |
Published On: | 2002-02-22 |
Source: | Washington City Paper (DC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 20:09:54 |
GOT A BLIGHT?
An East-Of-The-River Neighborhood Takes Aim At Phillies Blunts
When an embattled community considers which products it wants off store
shelves, single containers of alcohol are usually first on the list,
followed by rolling papers and the small baggies used for crack cocaine.
But one Southeast neighborhood has recently proposed an addition to the
inner-city hit list: Phillies Blunts, the cheap, ghetto-fabulous cigar
credited with everything from hiphop band names to the coughing fits of
rebellious 13-year-olds. "Philly" Blunts have so infiltrated the cultural
consciousness that they have their own exalted place in the vernacular,
right next to Mentos and J.Lo.
And in the Penn Branch community, they're on the chopping block. Led by
activist Roscoe Grant Jr., the community is asking stores to agree not to
sell Phillies Blunts, along with other nefarious consumer goods. If the
stores refuse to comply, the activists will petition to block renewal of
their liquor licenses.
"A lot of the crimes being committed here are being perpetrated by people
who are drinking single beers or buying a Blunt and filling it with
marijuana," says Grant. "It trashes our community."
Representatives of Altadis U.S.A. Inc., which manufactures the Phillies
lines of cigars, wonders how a cigar can wreak such destruction. "I've
never known a Phillies Blunt to be used for anything but what it is meant
for," says company Vice President Rick McKenzie. "I think this whole thing
is a little ridiculous. Phillies Blunts have been around years and years,
longer than any of this other stuff."
As for Grant's allegations about the swapping of tobacco and dope, McKenzie
cites technical difficulties. "I don't know how they get the cigar back
together," he says. "What--you cut it and then tape it back together? So
you are smoking Scotch tape? I think the idea might just be an urban myth."
If so, it's a pretty common one. Back in 1992, rapper Redman, in his song
"How To Roll A Blunt," laid out how to reassemble the emptied-out cigar:
"Take your finger and your thumb from tip to tip/Roll it in a motion then
the top piece you lick/Seal it, dry it wit ya lighter if ya gotta." And
according to the online Probert Encyclopedia, the term "Philly Blunt" has
come to represent all cigars "with marijuana replacing tobacco." It's not
surprising that Grant wants Phillies off the street.
But Phillies are many people's first cigar; their harsh taste and
machine-wrapped texture are, for better or worse, tied to coming of age. If
Grant & Co. succeed in taking Phillies off the local shelves, they won't
get the product out of our collective consumer memory.
"The Philly Blunt is a pretty bad cigar," says longtime D.C. resident Chris
Gange. "But the price is right, and if somebody wants them, they should be
able to get them."
An East-Of-The-River Neighborhood Takes Aim At Phillies Blunts
When an embattled community considers which products it wants off store
shelves, single containers of alcohol are usually first on the list,
followed by rolling papers and the small baggies used for crack cocaine.
But one Southeast neighborhood has recently proposed an addition to the
inner-city hit list: Phillies Blunts, the cheap, ghetto-fabulous cigar
credited with everything from hiphop band names to the coughing fits of
rebellious 13-year-olds. "Philly" Blunts have so infiltrated the cultural
consciousness that they have their own exalted place in the vernacular,
right next to Mentos and J.Lo.
And in the Penn Branch community, they're on the chopping block. Led by
activist Roscoe Grant Jr., the community is asking stores to agree not to
sell Phillies Blunts, along with other nefarious consumer goods. If the
stores refuse to comply, the activists will petition to block renewal of
their liquor licenses.
"A lot of the crimes being committed here are being perpetrated by people
who are drinking single beers or buying a Blunt and filling it with
marijuana," says Grant. "It trashes our community."
Representatives of Altadis U.S.A. Inc., which manufactures the Phillies
lines of cigars, wonders how a cigar can wreak such destruction. "I've
never known a Phillies Blunt to be used for anything but what it is meant
for," says company Vice President Rick McKenzie. "I think this whole thing
is a little ridiculous. Phillies Blunts have been around years and years,
longer than any of this other stuff."
As for Grant's allegations about the swapping of tobacco and dope, McKenzie
cites technical difficulties. "I don't know how they get the cigar back
together," he says. "What--you cut it and then tape it back together? So
you are smoking Scotch tape? I think the idea might just be an urban myth."
If so, it's a pretty common one. Back in 1992, rapper Redman, in his song
"How To Roll A Blunt," laid out how to reassemble the emptied-out cigar:
"Take your finger and your thumb from tip to tip/Roll it in a motion then
the top piece you lick/Seal it, dry it wit ya lighter if ya gotta." And
according to the online Probert Encyclopedia, the term "Philly Blunt" has
come to represent all cigars "with marijuana replacing tobacco." It's not
surprising that Grant wants Phillies off the street.
But Phillies are many people's first cigar; their harsh taste and
machine-wrapped texture are, for better or worse, tied to coming of age. If
Grant & Co. succeed in taking Phillies off the local shelves, they won't
get the product out of our collective consumer memory.
"The Philly Blunt is a pretty bad cigar," says longtime D.C. resident Chris
Gange. "But the price is right, and if somebody wants them, they should be
able to get them."
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