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Super Bowl

Pot Won't Be Advertised at Super Bowl, Though Players Will Probably Use It After

A proposed commercial by dispensary-locator company Weedmaps was sacked by NFL and NBC suits.

Nick Gillespie | 2.11.2022 2:30 PM

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weedmapsbrockollie | Weedmaps
"Brock Ollie," Weedmaps' "reluctant weed mascot," has been sidelined for the Super Bowl. (Weedmaps)

During Sunday's Super Bowl, you're likely to see some good football (go Bengals), an entertaining halftime show by Snoop Dogg (thankfully well past his Snoop Lion phase), and a bunch of try-hard commercials for everything from Amazon to Vroom (the online car retailer).

One thing that won't be advertised is marijuana, despite being legal for medical use in 38 states and recreational use in 19. The NFL and NBC blocked an attempt by Weedmaps, a company founded in 2008 to help California medical marijuana users locate dispensaries, to run an ad that CEO Chris Beals said would have tried to "push the dialogue forward around cannabis."

Both the NFL and NBC, the network broadcasting the Super Bowl, prohibit weed commercials. Ironies abound: Hard liquor, an intoxicant that even prohibitionists agree is more dangerous than marijuana, has been advertised during the Super Bowl since 2017. That year also saw commercials for other drugs such as antidepressants and birth control pills. Anheuser-Busch's Super Bowl beer commercials are their own subgenre, and the rapper Snoop Dogg, "whose name is synonymous with weed," is providing the game's entertainment.

Additionally, this year's Super Bowl will be played in California, the first state to legalize medical marijuana in 1996. The game will be hosted at SoFi Stadium, located in Inglewood, just an hour north of Weedmaps' headquarters in Irvine. Last year, the NFL announced it would no longer test players for marijuana during the off-season, though pot's active ingredient, THC, is still on the list of forbidden substances during the regular season. NFL players are widely known to smoke weed not simply to get high but to relieve the immense pain that comes simply from doing their jobs. The NFL is even funding research on the health benefits of cannabis, even though its use can lead to suspension or expulsion from the league.

Former tight end Martellus Bennett once claimed that "about 89%" of players use marijuana, telling a Bleacher Report podcast in 2018. "There are times of the year where your body just hurts so bad…You don't want to be popping pills all the time. There are anti-inflammatory drugs you take so long that they start to eat at your liver, kidneys and things like that."

Weedmaps surely knew that its proposed Super Bowl commercial would be blocked like a sloppy punt by network and NFL suits. In that sense, the whole story may simply be a publicity stunt. Yet, as Beals told Fox Business, the underlying question of pot's legal and cultural status is one well worth discussing at the national level. Support for legalizing weed approaches 70 percent, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y.) is pushing to end federal prohibition.

"We see the censorship [of marijuana ads] on social media with Facebook, Instagram," along with more conventional outlets, Beals told Fox Business. "There's been this very sort of cautious nature by media to really highlight it, to talk about it."

To further that conversation, Weedmaps has released a 90-second video that follows the travails of "Brock Ollie," the company's "reluctant weed mascot" as he asks himself the question, "Why is weed censored?" For the uninitiated, broccoli emojis are used to represent marijuana in places where openly talking about devil weed is not allowed.

DraftKings, which operates a platform for online gambling (speaking of an industry that was banned until recently and still faces many hurdles to legal and cultural acceptance), favors the Los Angeles Rams to beat the Cincinnati Bengals as of this writing. No matter which team takes home the Lombardi Trophy on Sunday, TV viewers have already lost out on seeing a commercial about a substance that 50 percent of them have used, employs over 320,000 Americans in its production and distribution, and that generates nearly $18 billion a year in legal sales.

If the brouhaha over Weedmaps' censored commercial succeeds in generating some serious, adult conversation about drug policy reform, at least there might be some moral victory.

Watch Weedmaps' ad below.

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NEXT: NYC Mayor Adams Wants More Facial Recognition Software for Cops

Nick Gillespie is an editor at large at Reason and host of The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie.

Super BowlMarijuanaDrug PolicySportsOnline GamblingTelevision
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  1. Dillinger   3 years ago

    after, before and during.

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      Have a Coke and a 10 yard gain.

      FJB

  2. mad.casual   3 years ago

    Pot Won't Be Advertised at Super Bowl, Though Players Will Probably Use It After

    It's never been advertised at the Super Bowl. After the Olympics' performance on international television, I have to wonder why you'd want to start now?

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   3 years ago

      Because now they have free advertising from journalists writing up the story?

      1. Kimberly T. Williams   3 years ago

        In 2022 many people are now joining online jobs very fast because it has potential. HJk i joined this 3 months ago and in 3 months I totally received $50743 and all I was doing is copy and paste stuff in my part time. Join now and start making money from this website: ....... http://moneystar33.blogspot.com/

  3. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

    Pot Won't Be Advertised at Super Bowl

    It would get in the way of all the SJW commercials.

  4. sarcasmic   3 years ago

    Ranch dressing in coffee?

  5. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    Build your own sports and broadcasting empires.

  6. Corporatist Remover   3 years ago

    Meanwhile, the libs want to provide drug addicts with taxpayer-subsidized crack pipes and syringes. And many prominent libertarians are on board with that plan.

    1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

      Government supplied crack pipes won’t work.

      1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

        They are likely to be cracked.

      2. Dick Hardwood   3 years ago

        Oh, you’re talking about the Hunter Plan. Surely all who follow it will be able to start companies and get billion dollar investment from Chinese companies/government, right?

    2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      Free crack pipes? Never heard of that. I kinda get free needles so as to reduce the transmission of diseases like Hep and AIDS, but free glass tubes with a spot of steel wool? That's news to me. Got a link?

      1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

        Psaki was saying the "crack kit" would contain things like alcohol swabs and lip balm (seriously), but would not include actual crack pipes.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          Wow. Things like that are reminders of why I don't watch network news or get a newspaper. Ignorance is bliss.

          1. VULGAR MADMAN   3 years ago

            If ignorance is bliss, you must be in goddamn nirvana!

      2. Corporatist Remover   3 years ago

        I'm not interested in funding other people's drug habits.

        1. Dick Hardwood   3 years ago

          Joe Biden is interested. He’s testing the pilot program with his son Hunter for the last 40 years. Look how well that worked. He got a navy career, investment and contracts worth ten of millions of dollars, and another career as a budding artist. He even gets all the chicks. Lots of strippers and whores. Not to mention his sister in law, and even his 14 year old niece Natalie!

      3. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

        I could never find a link from official sources that said "crack pipes" but that's understandable. They mentioned "smoking kits for illicit drugs" so you know what they meant.

        Oh, I also found a PDF for NGOs applying for the grant, get this, you have to be a "smoke free workplace". I'm not shitting you.

        1. daveca   3 years ago

          The white collar equivalent is the covid vaccine!

          Shoot up for free!

    3. D-Pizzle   3 years ago

      That's completely false! Well, at least it's mostly false. I mean, I suppose you could say that it's true, but I don't like that, so I'm going back to mostly false.

      1. Liberty Lover   3 years ago

        Snope Rates The Devil's Lies as 'Mostly True'
        U.S.—As the only unbiased arbiter of truth in a world of fake news, Snopes continues to expand its selfless mission to fact-check all the things everywhere. Whether they’re calling out a popular satire site for being conspicuously hilarious or explaining how blatant lies point to deeper truths, you can count on Snopes to probe the darkest depths, like a colonoscope of accuracy.
        As it turns out, not even Satan himself is safe from a Snopes fact-check. In a recent post, Snopes analyzed several statements made by the Prince of Darkness, utilizing their tried-and-true, highly methodical, investigative techniques to determine how his words lined up with their feelings. - babylonbee

    4. daveca   3 years ago

      hip hoppers are dopers. Gang bangers.

      Interesting the rationalizing over "alcohol is less dangerous.. "

      Mexican drug lords arent engaging in human trafficing to smuggle MD 2020 across the border.

      Reasoners cant see their own reliance on false memes like ' false comparison?'

      Dopers dope. Its bc their brains are damaged.

  7. Moonrocks   3 years ago

    Are they trying to be the cartoon rich white guy villain that ruins black neighborhoods for profit? Because that's kind of what it looks like they're doing.

    1. Moonrocks   3 years ago

      Damn, this was meant as a reply to the comment above.

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   3 years ago

        CIA needs money for the domestic war on terror.

        1. VULGAR MADMAN   3 years ago

          They can always sell more crack.

    2. Dillinger   3 years ago

      >>cartoon rich white guy villain that ruins black neighborhoods for profit

      Stan Kroenke already built SoFi Stadium

      1. daveca   3 years ago

        ...and the blacks have nothing to do with it....like distributing, selling, using...

        HA !

        Its a great day to be a Victim!

  8. Mickey Rat   3 years ago

    Why is Gillespie complaining about the NFL and NBC exercising their free speech rights?

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      Corporations do not have free speech rights.

      Fascist.

      Rights belong to the People. Fascist!

  9. Hank Phillips   3 years ago

    The 1906 "Pure Food" law was mostly drug prohibition and censorship. Like other violent laws making a crime of production and trade, it crashed the U.S. economy. Still, people lined up at drugstores to buy catarrh cures until the Harrison Tax Act, like today's Texas Fugitive Lebensborn Law, threatened physicians with career-destroying blacklisting and branding, then ushered in a World War among drug-refining colonial powers.

  10. Political McGuffin   3 years ago

    Same probably applies to toilet paper and pencils, who cares

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      people that arent brain dead druggies and drunks care when they see the nation laws and morals being deliberately flushed down the toilet by left wing anarchists.

      Was that too far over your head? Did I go past your Twitter 140 character limit?

      1. daveca   3 years ago

        theres Tiny

        Your shift at the abortion clinic over?

  11. Tony   3 years ago

    The Super Bowl doesn't want anything getting between it and the beer it exists to sell.

  12. Stephen W   3 years ago

    Ok sure but why is he dressed up like a piece of Broccoli?

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      mental problems I guess.

      I was hoping for Eddie Murphy doing Gumby.

  13. Liberty Lover   3 years ago

    Pot, has become legal or semi-legal in the majority of states. No one care if NFL players smoke dope anymore. The concern in the NFL is now performance enhancing drugs. That will probably become legal someday too.

  14. Kang Hoki dot Com   3 years ago

    Pot Won't Be Advertised at Super Bowl

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