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    Heres how legal weed has changed cannabis marketing on social media

    Women have slowly introduced themselves into the equation, disrupting whats traditionally thought of as a cannabis consumer.

    Legal marijuana has changed the way some people think about cannabis, leading to a shift in the way in which its marketed. A new study explores how is promoted on social media apps, prompting the market to open up and people who dont fit the typical stoner stereotype.

    The study, published in Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal, found that women have slowly introduced themselves into the equation, disrupting whats traditionally thought of as a cannabis consumer. These women promote cannabis in different ways, incorporating it into their daily lives and activities.

    Researchers used Instagram as their social media platform of choice, analyzing illegal sellers in Switzerland with cannabis influencers in the U.S., and spotting any differences. Investigators found that cannabis influencers were challenging what has long been considered appealing to cannabis markets, something that could have a global impact.

    Our findings show that cannabis influencers on Instagram are changing the stereotypical characteristics of illegal cannabis culture as being almost entirely dominated by men, to one where cannabis is represented as a desirable accessory in certain feminine lifestyles, write the studys researchers.

    These influencers painted cannabis as an activity that can be pursued by mothers, people who are invested in their physical and mental health and more.

    Study authors recognize how cannabis influencers have had to get creative on platforms such as Instagram considering how the app prevents the plants sale and censors its content.

    In their posts, influencers make it clear that theyre not selling cannabis and are simply endorsing it, tying it to appealing images and to a lifestyle that other people may be interested in replicating.

    When cannabis is marketed by legal influencers rather than illegal dealers, we find a shift in the use of symbols related to amateurism versus professionalism, intimacy and lifestyle, and argue that these changes are bound up with how the influencers do gender differently than sellers, explain the researchers, per coverage in Marijuana Moment.

    Cannabis use has evolved over the years, becoming less of a taboo topic and something that can be discussed and consumed more openly.