So many businesses of a cannabis-oriented nature are opening, each with unique needs for advertising that even the mainstream publications are running their ads. For the revenue.
Print publications across the nation are dying. Excluding advertising from cannabis businesses would be suicidal.
Hearst must be rolling over in his grave, it was his newspaper empire that demonized 'marijuana,' and he was a major force behind the criminalization of cannabis here in the USA.
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<table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0"> <tbody><tr> <td class="alt2" style="border: 1px inset;"> The legalization of marijuana in California is on the November ballot, and medicinal marijuana dispensary ads are all over the place these days.
If you grab a Sacramento News & Review, you'll see multiple ads for medicinal marijuana stores. Advertisements include free deliveries, free lighters and "free gram" promotions.
With so many shops, the medicinal marijuana business is competitive in Sacramento.
Jeff von Kaenel, president and CEO of the News & Review newspapers, said about 15 percent of the Sacramento publication's ads are for medicinal marijuana.
"It reflects the values we have at the News & Review. We let our readers make up their own minds about things. They're mature enough, and we don't want to be a censor of business in Sacramento." </td> </tr> </tbody></table>
More here.
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Print publications across the nation are dying. Excluding advertising from cannabis businesses would be suicidal.
Hearst must be rolling over in his grave, it was his newspaper empire that demonized 'marijuana,' and he was a major force behind the criminalization of cannabis here in the USA.
Quote:
<table width="100%" border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0"> <tbody><tr> <td class="alt2" style="border: 1px inset;"> The legalization of marijuana in California is on the November ballot, and medicinal marijuana dispensary ads are all over the place these days.
If you grab a Sacramento News & Review, you'll see multiple ads for medicinal marijuana stores. Advertisements include free deliveries, free lighters and "free gram" promotions.
With so many shops, the medicinal marijuana business is competitive in Sacramento.
Jeff von Kaenel, president and CEO of the News & Review newspapers, said about 15 percent of the Sacramento publication's ads are for medicinal marijuana.
"It reflects the values we have at the News & Review. We let our readers make up their own minds about things. They're mature enough, and we don't want to be a censor of business in Sacramento." </td> </tr> </tbody></table>
More here.
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