Weed Country highlights the experiences of a brave few entrepreneurs to tell the story of the growth and scale of the California medical marijuana industry and the U.S. pot trade. The Discovery Channel followed dealers, growers, and users in order to offer an inside look at the booming illicit trade. To put one’s business–which involves the daily breaking of federal law–on the line not only takes some brass (to borrow the Clintonian term), but a full-hearted commitment to the issue, which in this case is the federal prohibition on marijuana.
Weed Country’s featured grower Mike Boutin told Reason that it was not only the need for public education that drew him to the program, but his dissatisfaction with local law enforcement in the “Emerald Triangle” of three heavily cultivated California counties. Boutin sees bloated, over-equipped SWAT teams and Sheriff’s departments kicking in the doors to family homes, brandishing automatic weapons. Sometimes it’s the wrong home, sometimes someone gets shot. Boutin and other members of the show want to put the war on drugs back in the court of public opinion in a way that probably hasn’t been seen since at least The Wire changed the conversation about national drug policy.
That’s the beautiful thing about television. It allows the viewer to join with their friends and family for private conversation about controversial practices and issues. Weed Country forces the country to confront how the United States security apparatus operates and if a different strategy and set of goals might be more appropriate.
Max Lockie








