What is 420?
THE UNTOLD STORY BEHIND THE MEANING OF
420
We
have all heard a reference to 420, and if you are reading this, you probably
know what it means. But have you wondered about the real story behind 420? From
whose mouth was 420 first uttered? And what was the meaning of 420 originally?
Some
say 420 has to do with Bob Marley's death. Other's say it's linked to Adolf
Hitler's birth.
Let’s
debunk the most common myths about the world’s chilliest holiday, and uncover
the true origin of the phrase 420.
420
is deeply steeped in American pop culture and there are quite a few mentions in
many classic movies including: Pineapple Express, Harold
& Kumar Go to White Castle, Dazed and Confused, American
Beauty, Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay and
famously in Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction. Yes, it’s true. All
of the clocks in Tarantino’s masterpiece are set to 4:20.
So,
420 is prominent in films, but can we trace the origins of 420 to the silver
screen? Unlikely, since the term 420 has been used since the early 1970s, way
before Tarantino even picked up his first joint.
420 in Literature
Does
420 come from literature? People are actually studying this stuff! According to
one guy, there are references to 420 as a plant in H.P. Lovecraft’s short
horror story “The Walls of Erix”. Apparently Mr. Lovecraft is the father of
American horror fiction and a devotee of 420 -- who knew? He refers to 420 in
the story after the narrator experiences a mind-altering event and looks back
at the clock to find, to his shock, it’s STILL just 4:20.
So,
does “The Walls of Erix” double as a 420 origin story? Possibly, but there are
more theories of the meaning of 420 out there, some even murkier than
Lovecraft’s horror tale.
420 Conspiracy Theories
There
are many alleged origins of 420. It’s kind of a cannabis Urban Legend with
several “definitive” accounts of how we came to use this term. Some of the most
interesting theories include:
420
was a secret law enforcement code for people illegally smoking herb.
420
accounts for the number of active compounds found in dry herb.
420
refers to Adolf Hitler’s birthday.
420
refers to the date of Bob Marley’s death.
420
is the number reached after adding up all the numbers found in Bob Dylan songs.
Albert
Hofmann took the first deliberate LSD trip at 4:20 on 19 April 1943.
There
is even an alleged spiritual meaning in the Jewish faith. According to ancient
Hebrew numerological science the Hebrew word for “smoke” equals 420 in the
Gematria system.
Ok,
so most of these were probably dreamed up by someone on 420. But some more
legitimate explanations about the meaning of 420 exist out there.
The
most popular explanation of how the term 420 came about comes from California.
According
to legend and Snopes,
the term 420 was actually coined by a group of high school kids known as the
Waldo’s way back in the 1970s. The name came from their hangout spot, a wall
near their high school.
The
most legitimate 420 urban legend we’ve heard goes like this. Somehow the Waldo’s
heard of a hidden patch of, ahem, grass in the nearby San Reyes peninsula and
they agreed to meet at a statue of Louis Pasteur near the school to seek out
the buds. The group would meet week after week in the same spot at the same
time, piling into their car to smoke joint after
joint on their way to search for the mystical marijuana crop that allegedly
waited for them in the hills of San Reyes.
Originally,
the group would say “420-Louis” as their code for scheduling a meeting.
Eventually, they dropped the “Louis” because they found themselves using the
term “420” to describe anything marijuana-related.
“I
could say to one of my friends, I’d go, ‘420,’ and it was telepathic.” Said
Steve Capper, one of the original Waldo’s. “He would know if I was saying,
‘Hey, do you wanna go smoke some?’ Or, ‘Do you have any?’ Or, ‘Are you stoned
right now?’ It was kind of telepathic just from the way you said it.”
420 and the Grateful Dead
The
Grateful Dead probably picked up the Waldos slang in Marin County and later
popularized the term 420, forever immortalizing it in the American vernacular.
Many people give Grateful Dead bassist and founding member Phil Lesh the credit
for making the term fashionable, but the truth is 420 became synonymous with
and spread from the Dead subculture. Needless to say, The Dead talk and sing
about 420 in several songs - and it was rumored (and later debunked) that they
always stayed in room 420.
The
term 420 reached an even higher level of usage in 1990, after Steve Bloom, an
editor at High Times, saw the concept of 420 used on a Grateful
Dead concert flyer.
Staff
on the magazine, long the leading publication on marijuana, adopted the phrase
and 420 became a widespread counterculture holiday and concept.
So,
what are you doing to celebrate 420? Tag us #420vapornation and let us know! You
can also check out our list of 20 essential 420 party ideas
you never thought of.











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