Los Angeles Times - 16.11.2019

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C2 LATIMES.COM/BUSINESS


BUSINESS BEAT


The largest celebrity tour company in Los Angeles is
joining a small but growing list of tour operators that take
visitors into the wildly popular world of cannabis growing,
smoking and consuming.
Starline Tours, a company that was born in the shad-
ow of Grauman’s Chinese Theatre more than 50 years ago,
plans to offer a cannabis tour next month that will include
a drive past the home of celebrities, plus a visit to a dis-
pensary and an indoor grow facility, complete with a 20-
minute demonstration on blowing glass bongs.
Since California legalized the recreational use of mari-
juana in 2016, international visitors have expressed inter-
est in how cannabis is grown, sold, smoked and digested,
said Susan Wilson, a spokeswoman for Starline Tours.
“People, they just want to know what it’s all about,” she
said.
Because of Starline’s long history in Los Angeles, Wil-
son said, she believes visitors will feel assured that the
tour will be safe and legal. The company hints that tour
customers may spot a pot-loving celebrity or two buying
marijuana, bongs or edibles.
Starline Tours is coming late to the game. A handful of
smaller tour companies has been operating cannabis
tours around Los Angeles for months, including a limited-
time-only tour that featured a pot-smoking session with
weed-loving ’70s movie legend Tommy Chong.
Each existing tour has its own points of interest, gener-
ally including a grow facility and a marijuana dispensary
and maybe a joint-rolling lesson. Tour guests might get
discounts on the marijuana products, but no freebies.
Tours are between $40 and $200 a person, depending
on the length of the trip, the stops and other features.
The tour by Starline is a partnership with Herbarium,
a dispensary in West Hollywood that has a grow room on
display and offers a glass-blowing demonstration.
Beginning Dec. 1, the two-hour tour will operate daily,
starting at 9:30 a.m. at Starline’s facility at Hollywood &
Highland and continuing all day until the last tour de-
parts at 4 p.m. The price: $79.

Celebrity tour


company adds a


cannabis outing


By Hugo Martin

Twitter Inc. is making some exceptions to its recent
ban on all political advertising, announcing Friday that it
will allow “cause-based” ads for some economic, environ-
mental or social issues.
There will still be certain restrictions for those promo-
tions, often referred to as issue ads. Groups that promote
content about a cause — climate change, for example —
can’t link to a specific candidate’s landing page, promote
the ad on behalf of a candidate or mention a particular
piece of legislation. Such ads also won’t be able to target
people using specific identifiers, such as email addresses
or ZIP Codes.
Candidates, elected officials and political parties will
be banned from buying any ads at all, including ones
about issues or causes.
The point, Twitter said, is to allow advertisers to en-
courage discussion around certain subjects but not di-
rectly influence elections.
“While advertising should not be used to drive politi-
cal, legislative or regulatory outcomes,” Twitter general
counsel Vijaya Gadde said on a conference call with re-
porters, the company believes “there is certain cause-
based advertising that can facilitate public conversations
about important topics.”
Twitter’s policy comes amid a presidential campaign
in full swing less than a year before the election and runs
counter to rules Facebook Inc. has established for its so-
cial network. Facebook does allow political advertising
but doesn’t fact-check those ads the way it does nonpoliti-
cal ads. That policy has generated intense pushback from
some candidates, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-
Mass.) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).
Twitter won’t fact-check cause-based ads either.
The company’s shares rose 1.25% to $29.25 on Friday.

Twitter ad ban has


some exceptions


bloomberg

New Jersey is seeking more than $640 million from
Uber in taxes and penalties, saying the ride-hailing com-
pany misclassified its drivers as independent contrac-
tors.
The decision is the latest setback for Uber and other
companies in the so-called gig economy that rely heavily
on contract labor to deliver the services at the heart of
their popular apps.
Worker advocates say that job misclassification hurts
laborers and the states where they live, which miss out on
tax revenues.
New Jersey’s labor department told Uber that it, along
with its subsidiary Rasier, owes $523 million in overdue
taxes from the last four years and must pay fines and in-
terest of an additional $119 million, according to letters
from the department that were first reported Thursday
by Bloomberg Law.
Uber disputed the state’s findings. “We are challenging
this preliminary but incorrect determination, because
drivers are independent contractors in New Jersey and
elsewhere,” the San Francisco-based company said in a
statement.
The move was hailed as a victory by those pushing for
better working conditions for Uber’s drivers. Many of
Uber’s drivers work part time, but others put in long
hours and rely on driving as their sole source of income.
California, the largest source of revenue for both Uber
and Lyft, passed a law requiring such companies to clas-
sify drivers as employees instead of independent contrac-
tors, which would give them protections such as min-
imum wage and the ability to unionize.
That law is set to go into effect Jan. 1, but Uber and Lyft
have been pushing for a carve-out exemption.

N.J. hits Uber on


misclassification


associated press

The U.S. government’s ef-
fort to crack down on vaping
has stalled as President
Trump, under pressure from
the industry and conserva-
tive activists, has reconsid-
ered his Health and Human
Services secretary’s pro-
posed ban on nearly all fla-
vored e-cigarette products.
Some Trump adminis-
tration health officials
thought they had settled on
a final, revised plan about
two weeks ago, according to
a person familiar with the
process. But the White
House never signed off, and
the plan has now been de-
layed yet again. Trump
promised a “big paper” this
week on vaping, but the
White House hasn’t issued
any such document.
Trump said Monday that
he would meet with vaping
proponents as well as medi-
cal professionals who sup-
port strict regulation. But
no such meetings have hap-
pened, and industry and
health groups say they
haven’t been invited to the
White House.
Health Secretary Alex
Azar, standing by Trump’s
side in the Oval Office, an-
nounced in September that
the administration would
ban all flavors other than to-
bacco, to curb use by chil-
dren. But an outcry by con-
servative anti-tax activists
and vape shop owners has
led Trump to rethink the
ban.


As it considers the fate of
the proposed regulations,
the administration is weigh-
ing a mix of factors including
children’s health, the small
businesses that are the foun-
dation of the industry, and
the decision by Juul Labs
Inc., maker of the biggest-
selling vaping device, to vol-
untarily stop selling mint
and other flavors, according
to an administration official.
The official said education
to curb youth vaping and en-
forcement of age restrictions
on sales of the products are
likely to emerge as key pillars
of any final regulation.
But proponents of a ban
are growing frustrated.
“With every day of delay,
our kids are picking up these
products and becoming ad-
dicted,” said Gregg Haifley,
director of federal relations
for the American Cancer So-
ciety Cancer Action Net-
work. “We want Congress or
the [Food and Drug Admin-
istration] to permanently
remove the flavors from the
market that we know are
used to target kids, and act
in the interest of public
health.”
The administration offi-
cial and the person familiar
with the matter both asked
not to be identified while dis-
cussing an internal debate.
“President Trump and
this administration are com-
mitted to responsibly pro-
tecting the health of chil-
dren,” White House spokes-
man Judd Deere said in an
email. “We are in an ongoing
rule-making process, and I
will not speculate on the fi-
nal outcome.”
Opponents of strict regu-
lation have made a public
health argument of their
own: that vaping is far less
harmful than cigarette
smoking and has enabled

many former smokers to
wean themselves off of to-
bacco products. Industry
advocates have warned that
a wide-ranging ban would
close stores, put thousands
of people out of work and
drive adult vapers back to
traditional cigarettes.
Trump has said he’d raise
the legal vaping age to about
21, but hasn’t detailed other
moves. The White House has
signaled that vape shops
would be exempt from any
new e-cigarette rules.
Meanwhile, U.S. health
officials are increasingly
concerned about a mysteri-
ous lung ailment that has af-
flicted vapers. The Centers
for Disease Control and Pre-
vention said that as of
Wednesday it had identified
2,172 cases of the illness and
that 42 people had died in 24
states.
The CDC and the FDA
have advised people to stop
using vaping products while
they investigate the condi-
tion.
But the CDC also said
this week that cigarette
smoking among adults fell to
an all-time low of 13.7% in
2018, with 3.2% of adults who
used nicotine products last
year choosing e-cigarettes.
Under Azar’s plan, all e-
cigarette flavors other than
tobacco would have been re-
moved from the market,
though companies could ap-
ply to return them to
shelves. Now, the adminis-
tration appears to be
headed for a compromise
that would try to address va-
ping-related deaths and
underage use without enact-
ing the full scope of Azar’s
proposed ban on all flavors
except tobacco — a prohib-
ition that vape stores say
would close their busi-
nesses.

Regardless, the adminis-
tration changed plans this
month. On Nov. 5, it abruptly
canceled meetings with vap-
ing industry representa-
tives, including some who
had scheduled only four
days earlier.
This week, the FDA’s top-
ranking tobacco regulator
told lawmakers that the
agency is waiting for the
White House to make a deci-
sion about curbs on flavored
vaping products. “There is
no final answer as of now,”
Mitch Zeller, the official, told
senators Wednesday.
The same day, Azar said
the administration was
looking to strike an “appro-
priate public health bal-
ance” with any regulation.
“How do we ensure that
adults have access to e-ciga-
rettes who need to wean off
of combustible tobacco, but
how do we prevent kids from
getting addicted?” Azar
asked in a speech.
Trump has recently
talked more about the im-
portance of preserving jobs
in the industry — a signal
that pro-vaping lobbyists
are having some success
heading off a ban. His ad-
ministration has said the
Department of Health and
Human Services doesn’t ac-
tually have jurisdiction over
vape shops, only e-ciga-
rettes.
“We have a lot of people to
look at — including jobs,
frankly, because, you know,
it’s become a pretty big in-
dustry,” Trump told report-
ers at the White House on
Nov. 8. “We’re talking about
the age. We’re talking about
flavors. We’re also talking
about keeping people work-
ing.”

Wingrove and Porter write
for Bloomberg.

STRICT REGULATIONS on vaping were proposed in response to a lung ailment linked to dozens of deaths.


Luis SincoLos Angeles Times

Vaping crackdown delayed


as Trump considers impact


Flavored e-cigarette


ban is up in the air


over concerns about


jobs and adult access.


By Josh Wingrove
and Gerald Porter Jr.


Hulu’s live TV bundle for
cord cutters is about to get
more expensive.
The Walt Disney Co.-
owned streaming service
said Friday that its Hulu +
Live TV offering, which in-
cludes more than 60 televi-
sion channels, will increase
in price by $10 a month,
starting next month.
As of Dec. 18, the so-called
skinny bundle will raise its
fee to $55 a month, up from
$45. The change will affect
new and existing customers,
according to a blog post on
the Santa Monica-based
company’s website.
“The new price better re-
flects the substantial value
of Hulu + Live TV and allows


us to continue offering all of
the popular live news, sports
and entertainment pro-
gramming included in the
plan,” Hulu said in the post.
The price change comes
as the cost of watching live
TV via streaming is getting
more expensive for consum-
ers. This year, AT&T Inc.
raised the price of its
streaming bundle, AT&T
TV Now, to $65 a month, rep-
resenting a jump of about
$15. AT&T has sustained
heavy losses as consumers
have dropped pay-TV pack-
ages in favor of lower-cost
streaming services.
It’s hardly a surprise that
Hulu would raise prices as
programming costs in-
crease, particularly in live
sports, which is key to the
appeal of Hulu’s live TV bun-
dle.
Hulu has been a drag on
earnings for Disney, which
took operational control of
the streaming service in May
after a deal with Comcast
Corp. Disney does not break

out financial results for
Hulu, but the entertainment
giant said this month that
losses at its direct-to-con-
sumer and international
segment ballooned to
$740 million in the fourth
quarter, more than double
from a year ago, because of
Hulu, as well as investment
in Disney+, which launched
this week.
Hulu also may have been
encouraged by growth at its
live TV service as U.S. con-
sumers stray from tradi-
tional cable packages at an
accelerating pace.
Media analysis firm Mof-
fettNathanson estimates
there are 2.7 million sub-
scribers for Hulu + Live TV,
up from 1.2 million the same
time a year ago. That’s about
the same as for rival Sling
TV, and significantly more
than the estimated 1.1 mil-
lion who use AT&T TV Now.
YouTube TV has about 1.
million subscribers.
Hulu live TV subscribers
also get access to the regular

Hulu service, which offers
next-day streaming of TV
shows as well as original pro-
gramming including Emmy
winner “The Handmaid’s
Tale.”
Founded in 2007, Hulu’s
basic streaming service,
which allows people to
watch shows such as “This Is
Us” and “The Good Doctor”
the day after they air, costs
$6 a month with advertising
and $12 a month without
ads. Disney recently said
Hulu has 28.5 million sub-
scribers.
Hulu is expected to play a
significant role in Disney’s
streaming strategy, serving
as the home of older and
original programming from
FX networks.
Disney is selling a bundle
that includes flagship serv-
ice Disney+, ESPN+ and ad-
supported Hulu for $12.99 a
month. Disney+, which
launched Tuesday, said it
has hit 10 million sign-ups,
including people using its
seven-day free trial.

Price of Hulu live TV is going up


Fee for Disney-owned


streaming service’s


skinny bundle will


increase $10 a month.


By Ryan Faughnder

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