Annie Lowrey has a smart piece in the NYT Magazine about how the cannabis business is likely to look after legalization. She gets one key point - much lower prices - though she doesn’t develop its implications for the size of the cannabis market and the prevalence cannabis abuse disorder; that’s not what her story is about.
The focus of the article is on consistency, and how the industry is stumbling toward being able to deliver a reproducible product, to the point where two joints with the same brand name will be alike as two beers with the same brand name. If that happens - and I think Lowrey is right that it will - that might make cannabis a much safer product. But there’s a subtlety here.
daksya says
Which parameters are constrained in order to standardize? And which parameters can be relaxed to allow diversity?
JamesWimberley says
It looks as if pot needs the equivalent of oenobabble to prop up diversity. James Thurber:
bighorn50 says
Here's a 2013 Summer Humboldt Green Sensemilla. It isn't very subtle at all — the nose is distinctly burnt hemp. On the other hand, two tokes will knock you flat on your a**.
bighorn50 says
But people who actually like beer don't drink mass-market beers (much). Even my brothers (who like lagers and actively dislike heavy styles like stouts) avoid Bud, Miller and Coors generally in favor of Miller-Coors and InBev's (slightly) upscale brands like Blue Moon.
Of course the key question about American beers (prior to the microbrewery renaissance) is, "Why is American beer like having sex in a canoe?"
yogibeaty says
Well, I don't really disagree with you, but IMO there is both a greater variety in wine and a greater amount of dreck, much of it sold at exorbitant prices.
And as far as pot goes, there are variations within one plant, let alone one grow room, let alone one strain. Wine grapes varietals are very few comparatively.
name99 says
Speaking as someone who doesn't drink or use cannabis, let me make the following cynical remark.
The wine market is different from the beer market because it's the market of snobs who want to distinguish themselves from the commoners. This is no different from the indy music or indy film phenomenon. The reality of the world is you have a large population who just want to get drunk, and will go for the cheapest thing (box wine or low-end beer) which does the job. You then have a smaller crowd who, in addition to wanting to get drunk want to show off their superiority, which sustains a bunch of specialty beers and wines. And then you have a truly minuscule crowd who can actually tell the difference between A and B and are willing to pay for it. Wine (and distilled alcohol) sustains all these different variants because (according to Hollywood and thus to people who take their cues from Hollywood) the quick way you establish that you're a middlebrow person of taste and discernment is that you make a huge fuss about the particular fermentation process you drink on different occasions.
I expect no difference in a legal cannabis market. The bulk of the stoner crowd will go for the cheapest product that will do the job. The crowd that want to appear cool will go for weird shit with cloves added or which comes in a differently shaped box or whatever.
The only issue relevant to your question is whether it will stick as a mark of taste and discernment that you make a huge fuss about the particular brand of smoke you choose to give yourself lung cancer and rot your brain. My guess is that it will not. The tobacco companies could not get this to stick under circumstances where they had substantially more freedom to say what they liked.
Of course there'll be an attempt to go down the branding road of alcohol, but my guess is that in ten or fifteen years cannabis will be in the same ghetto as tobacco today — the mark of the lower classes, the indolent, and the unambitious. It won't press any of the buttons that have led to the artificial diversity driving wine variations, because it won't be in any sense an aspirational or positional product.