WHAT WENT WRONG - Out of Frame: Scientology and Hollywood
Episode Date: June 12, 2026In preparation for Monday's episode on War of the Worlds (2005) Chris and Lizzie explore the history of Scientology, the wave of religious movements in early 20th century Los Angeles, and set the tabl...e for Tom Cruise's disastrous publicity tour leading up to the release of the film. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome back to another episode of What Went Wrong, your favorite podcast, Full Stop,
that just so happens to be about movies and how it's nearly impossible to make them,
let alone a good one, let alone to make a good one or any movie at all,
whilst one scrubs the deck of the sea org.
I'm Lizzie Bassett, one of your hosts here, as always, with Chris Winterbauer,
and I'm really, really excited for today's episode.
Chris, what have you prepared for us?
Today, Lizzie, we are diving into a unique phenomena or so I thought of Hollywood,
which is a religion very closely associated with Hollywood, which is Scientology,
which is important to tee up because it becomes an important aspect of our coverage of War of the Worlds,
which comes on Monday.
So this is, you could call it an out of frame, you could call it a primer.
I am going to call it an exploration of science.
and how perhaps it is not as fringe as we might think relative to many a strange gathering that has taken
place in Los Angeles over the years. I don't want to just regurgitate what people have seen
in going clear, for example, either the book or the documentary, although we are going to talk about
those things briefly. What I really want to do is kind of put Scientology in context, historically,
and then try to explore where Tom Cruise fits in briefly to lead us into really the early 2000s,
getting into the release of War of the Worlds.
And I did watch Going Clear in preparation for this.
I had seen it before, but I happily watched it again.
Yeah.
And so if you would like to skip today's episode and just dive into War of the Worlds,
completely understand.
But I hope that we will give you guys some new information here that will be helpful
in the exploration of belief and truth that's going to be.
come on Monday. So without further ado, Lizzie, let's dive in. Lizzie, when did you become a
Scientologist? The minute I moved to Los Angeles, Chris. You did move to Los Angeles.
How many? 15 years ago? 17 years ago. 15 years ago. And I'm guessing one of the first buildings you
noticed was... Well, Scientology has, it actually has many centers across Los Angeles.
Oh, no, no, no.
Many.
The two big ones.
Across the world.
Yes, across the world.
But has a big physical presence in Los Angeles, most notably with two buildings.
One is an enormous, hideous cobalt blue building.
It's called Big Blue.
Big Blue.
That sort of looms over East Hollywood.
And my first ever apartment, which I loved, was on the corner.
I said it was in Los Angeles.
It was really in East Hollywood.
So it was kind of triangulated almost as,
the third prong in a triangle that featured the main Scientology Center. And then my personal favorite,
the Celebrity Center was very, very close to my apartment. And the thing that I always remember was that
we used to get brunch at one of the restaurants right across the street from the Celebrity Center.
And I don't know if they still do this, but for a time period, I know that they would have these
like lavish brunches set out on the lawn of the Celebrity Center. And we always were kind of looking
across the street being like, do you think, like, it is, it looks free.
Like, could we?
Yeah.
You like the little, the rabbit looking at the trap, you know?
I know.
We never did.
Yeah.
So it's, it's, Scientology has an enormous presence in Hollywood and the world is very aware of it,
in large part, thanks to Tom Cruise.
So sources for today's episode include, but are not limited to going clear, Scientology,
Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief by Lawrence Wright, a piece of blue sky, Scientology,
Dianetics, and El Ron Hubbard,
by John Attack, or Attic, bare-faced Messiah by Russell Miller, and a number of videos, interviews,
retrospectives, in particular videos and footage of Tom Cruise and Elron Hubbard and David Miscavage,
who currently runs the church. Now, in case you aren't aware, Lizzie, Scientology has been
back in the news. Are you aware of the current trend of Scientology speed runs? No. No, this is not
trying to climb the bridge of, we'll get into it in a second, as quickly as possible.
This is people, content creators, filming themselves running through a Scientology building
to see how far they can make it before being kicked out.
Oh, that's not a good idea.
No, it started in Hollywood, then spread to New York, Sydney, Vancouver, London, and beyond.
As we mentioned, Scientology has large property holdings across the world.
Yeah.
It started with a viral video post.
hosted by an 18-year-old shot with his meta-rayband glasses.
He apparently ran into another content creator
who happened to be a vocal critic of Scientology.
That creator gave him an overview.
This organization is a cult, he said.
The original content creator thought it was funny.
He goes into the church.
He films a staffer selling him a book.
That mundane interaction went viral.
He realized Scientology is an easy way to make money to generate views.
Another creator says,
hey, let's run through the building together.
The trend is born.
and other people start doing it more aggressively.
They're wearing masks.
They're blowing air horns.
They're forcing entry.
They're damaging property.
To be clear, the original creator says he regrets posting the video.
And it's interesting because on the one hand,
Scientologists have said, this is basically a form of harassment.
This is a hate crime.
If any other religion was suffering through this, right?
If somebody was rushing through a synagogue,
if they were rushing through a mosque,
if they were rushing through a church,
people would condemn this.
But you think it's funny because it's Scientology.
I can't believe I'm going to stand up for Scientology,
but I think that's technically correct.
It's interesting, yeah.
And Jenna Miscavich, who's the niece of current Scientology leader,
David Miscavich, posted an Instagram video saying,
quote, I'm proud of these kids for doing something
that the government is too corrupt and chicken shit to do.
And the question is, Lizzie,
are the videos helping anyone inside the church?
If there is abuse going on inside the church,
which we will get to,
are they helping? Are they just another form of exploitation?
Leah Ramin, who I'm sure you know of, Lizzie the actress, perhaps most famous for King of Queens,
who was a former Scientologist. She left the church in 2013. She said, I spent decades on the other side of this.
And if I had been confronted by people running through the Scientology buildings and harassing me or staff,
it would have pushed me further into Scientology. Yes, that's what I was going to say.
Because the whole ethos of it is victimization.
to a certain degree. Like, like the way that all of the, I'm sure we'll get into this, but the tax
exempt status was framed and everything was that, you know, everyone is out to get us and we're
just trying to practice our religious freedom. So if you're having people coming in and
doing this, which like clearly is just to get views and is, you know, harassing people,
hurting property, like disrupting your day, I don't think that's going to get anybody to leave,
if anything that gives them more fodder for, you know, how the church itself is being attacked.
So what I've always found most interesting about Scientology is less the specifics of belief,
because I always find those unusual in every religion from Islam to Christianity to Judaism.
But it is so recent that, you know, that I think that's what makes it.
It's kind of like Mormonism.
That's actually a lot of similarities to Mormonism also in terms of the way that the truths are revealed
to the creator.
But yeah, I think that's all it is.
It's just that it's more modern,
and people think you probably should come up
with a more realistic story, I guess,
if it's going to be nowadays.
And Elron Hubbard said, no.
We're going to talk a lot about story.
We're going to talk about why it's so modern.
We're going to talk about what it was birthed out of.
But what I find so interesting about it
is that it almost feels like this mollusk
on the underside of Hollywood's belly in a way.
And Hollywood is slow to embrace a lot of religious films,
I think a lot of Hollywood stars are reluctant to speak out about their religious beliefs for fear of alienating a portion of their audience.
Of course, there are exceptions.
And of course, as we've discussed on the show, there are big religious moviegoing audiences out there that some studios, Angel Studios, for example, are trying to cater to.
Yet here we have this fringe religion that exists in the heart of Hollywood.
As you mentioned, Lizzie, Big Blue at 4833 Fountain Avenue, is an enormous former hospital converted to a Scientology.
Center that features in, you know, assign the size of a movie screen, the word Scientology
across its roof.
It stands out.
But the truth is, Scientology is not an outlier in Los Angeles history.
And I didn't know that.
L.A. has long been a hotbed for new religions and religious revivals.
And no, Lizzie, I'm not just talking about the counterculture movement of the 60s.
and 70s, we talked a little bit about children of God, for example, when we were discussing the
River Phoenix episode.
Let's go back, though, 60, 70 years prior to the early 1900s.
So if you were to think of L.A. back then, it's far more homogenous than it would eventually
become.
It's got a large population of white mainstream Protestants with roots in Europe.
Many have migrated from the Midwest.
And then the population exploded.
There's 100,000 people in L.A. in 1900.
That grows to 570,000 by 1920, and then doubled to over a million in 1930.
A lot of this is obviously the development of Hollywood, for example.
Hollywood moved from Florida to Los Angeles around the early 19-teens into the 1920s.
The major studios are being formed, and as Hollywood's being built, so is L.A.'s religious economy.
So the city's packed with a very ethnically diverse group of people all of a sudden,
which means it's also far more religiously diverse.
And the last thing, a few of these Christian sects felt they needed
was to lose ground to some of these other fates.
They're like, they're taking our congregation.
The economist once argued,
looking back, LA's most successful export is not Hollywood,
but Pentecostalism.
Do you know the definition of Pentecostalism?
I did not.
I don't.
When I think Pentecostal, I think Pentecostal churches in the South.
I think, like, snake handling and, you know, things that began as tent revivals.
Tent revivals, yeah.
Like, it's basically, it's a movement within the evangelical wing of the Protestant Christian community.
Right.
And there's a couple of important aspects to it. It's more complicated than this.
But basically, they emphasize direct personal experience of God through baptism with the Holy Spirit.
So obviously, this is very different than Catholicism.
And they adhere to the inerrancy of the Bible, which means the Bible's 100% right.
Every word is right. This is the word of God.
And the necessity of being born again.
Now, the Pentecostal Church has important roots in L.A.
A key figure was preacher William Seymour, who set up a church on Azusa Street,
it's now known as Little Tokyo.
He was a student of Charles Perram and took on the mantle of speaking in tongues,
per your revivalist comment from earlier, Lizzie.
The rich were also getting in on it.
So Lyman Stewart, founder of Union Oil Company, funded the Bible Institute of Los Angeles in 1908.
Lizzie, are you aware of Biola University?
No.
That's Bible Institute of Los Angeles.
Have you seen the...
It sounds like a payola.
a scam. They couldn't rethought that, but whatever.
Have you seen the Jesus save sign
at the top of the Ace Hotel?
Yes.
That was originally made, as for Bial University,
it was moved around, it got put
on the top of what was formerly the United
Artists building and then was eventually converted into
the Ace Hotel. And that's how you have a Jesus
save sign on top of the Ace Hotel,
which is very unusual.
So during the Roaring 20s, film and
religious fundamentalism are thriving
in L.A. and they're overlapping.
And this is when we get, Lizzie, what some historians
have called the heyday of biblical epics. So you've got the Ten Commandments, King of Kings, Noah's
Ark, Ben Hur, Tale of the Christ, the MGM film that would eventually be remade with Charlton Heston
that we covered. And preachers were coming to Los Angeles looking for an audience. So a couple of examples.
Amy Semple McPherson, she established the Church of the Four Square Gospel. Sounds completely real.
She was called God's Best Publicity Agent. Some historians describe her as the first religious celebrity
the mass media era. Interesting. She was kind of like a religious influencer, right? She was theatrical.
She used radio, print, and film to spread her message. And she had friends in high places in Hollywood,
like Charlie Chaplin, who reportedly told her, half your success is due to your magnetic appeal,
half due to the props and the lights. And so I do think, like, Hollywood and religion share
an affection for theatrics, let's say. Well, it's necessary to both. And I think it always
has been necessary to religion.
You know, obviously there's a huge difference
between when we're talking about Protestant
or especially fundamentalist Christians
and something like Catholicism,
except that they both love the theater of it all.
Yes, absolutely.
So as early as 1913,
one New York magazine described Los Angeles
as susceptible to, quote,
spiritualists, mediums, astrologists, phrenologists,
palmists, and other breeds of esoteric windjammers.
Nothing's changed.
Can we bring windjammers back?
That is the best.
Also, do you know what phrenology is?
That's not the thing with your skull, is it?
Yes, yeah.
It's the belief that the shape and measurements of a person's skull
indicate their mental faculties and personal traits.
If that were true, I would be the richest man in the world.
My forehead is a seven head.
So, anyway, there was also the Mazdasnan.
Mazdaznan society.
They were a cult of sun worshippers and they engaged in self-torture.
There was Mount Helios, led by a...
a woman who claimed to have control of a thousand men, which she may have, for all I know.
She also had some interesting ideas, or they did, like free child care, profit sharing,
free public transportation for working people, and free trade.
Those are crazy.
Wasn't all bad.
I mean, for the time, yes, burner at the stake.
Now, the Blackburn Colt was a mother-daughter team who claimed to have had visions of the
Archangels Michael and Gabriel, who divinely ordered them to write a book and promise them
coordinates to oil and gold around the world.
It reminds me a little bit of Mormonism and the Angel Moroni and whatnot.
I don't know if you ever watched The Righteous Gemstones, but my favorite sequence
and the whole thing is, I think it might have been in season three where Uncle Baby Billy
sings, There Will Come a Pay Day.
And they wrote this song for the show.
If you've never seen this, look it up on YouTube.
His outfit alone is the reason to watch it.
But the whole thing is like, I'm only doing this because there will come a payday.
Hallelujah, what a pay day.
Now, some of these were inclusive, some of them were antagonistic, like Joe Jeffers of the Kingdom Temple.
He said he heard the voices of Noah and Jesus and had power over people's fates.
And he was actually part of the anti-Semitic Christian identity movement.
And he condemned Catholics and Jewish people in Hollywood.
During the 1930s, there was a decent Nazi presence in Hollywood that we discussed briefly on Casablanca.
Of course.
And in the 30s, there was also the I Am movement or the mighty I Am presence founded by married
couple Guy and Edna Ballard. Edna said she was a medium. Guy said he had a spiritual
awakening on Mount Shasta, met the great ascended master, who was a god. They went on a voyage
through time and space. They astral projected to visit ancient cities. They explored past
lives. And they met guests from Venus. And then they wrote a series of books called Unveiled
Mysteries or starting with Unveiled Mysteries, which they sold during the Great Depression.
There's always like a commerce angle to most of these religious movements. Not all, but
but to most or many of them.
Can I pitch a possibility as to why Los Angeles?
I think the thing about Los Angeles is, and you hit on this,
the speed with which it grew was insane.
And the vast majority of the people who lived here were not from here.
Yep.
So you've got a bunch of people coming with the hopes of making it big,
making it rich, you know, finding a purpose in their life.
They probably don't know that many people.
So one of the things that they're going to look for immediately
is community, which is something you can always get from religion. And the other thing that they're
going to look for is somebody telling you, oh, I can explain why this isn't working for you, because
it will not work for the vast majority of the people that show up here. So you've got a
population of people who are just extremely vulnerable to this kind of organization. It makes
total sense that this would be a breeding ground for religions, cults, everything.
And like you said, Lizzie, I completely agree for many people, certainly not.
all. There are a lot of industries in Los Angeles. It's a misnomer to say it's a one industry town.
Yes. But many people come here attempting to break into the seemingly impenetrable institution
known as Hollywood. And so if another institution grants you passage, acceptance, in fact, says
you're special, you have a purpose, you're meaningful, that's an incredibly seductive and
powerful sales pitch. And so the point is, as you've expertly diagnosed, by the time the Church
of Scientology shows up in the 1950s.
L.A. is a breeding ground for a lot of unusual gurus, practices, and followings.
And in fact, as we've explored, Scientology was tame in comparison to many of these.
And it seemed, or may have seemed, more legitimate.
The only problem was, it wasn't.
And to understand why we need to talk about Lafayette Ronald Hubbard, or El Ron Hubbard,
and the book that led to Scientology known as Dianetics.
So El Ron Hubbard, and we've talked about him briefly before, Lizzie, but let's dive back in.
He was born in Nebraska in 1911.
And say what you want about Elron Hubbard,
and you could say a lot about Elron Hubbard,
but one thing I think everybody would agree on
is the fact that he has an incredible and inexhaustible imagination.
Across his life, a lot of what's written about him
focuses on fact-checking the stories he told about himself
because he contradicted himself a lot.
To be clear, much of what he said about his childhood,
his education, his time in the Navy.
I was going to say, his war hero slash war crimes.
There's a funny portion in going clear where basically he claims he was blowing up submarines,
but the reality was he was just killing whales with death charges.
And the Navy said, you cannot have access to any more death charges, Elron Hubbard.
The point is, much of this doesn't match what his family and colleagues have offered in comparison.
and, in fact, he even contradicts himself.
He contradicts his private journals, in many cases.
A superior court judge who ruled against Hubbard in 1984
once described him as, quote,
virtually a pathological liar when it comes to his history,
backgrounds, and achievements.
At the same time, it appears that he is charismatic
and highly capable of motivating, organizing,
controlling, manipulating, and inspiring his adherence,
end quote.
So Lawrence Wright, author of Going Clear,
which was made into the documentary that we've discussed,
of the same name, has spent a lot of time investigating Hubbard's life. And he argues that the, quote,
tug of war between Scientologists and anti-scientologists over Hubbard's biography has created two
swollen archetypes, the most important person who ever lived, and the world's greatest con man.
Those are the two ends of the spectrum. He even argues that the discrepancies between what Hubbard
says about himself and what others say about him is, quote, overshadowed the fact that he genuinely
was a fascinating man, an explorer, a best person.
selling author and the founder of a worldwide religious movement.
I am a writer, a doctor, a nuclear physicist, a theoretical philosopher.
But above all, I am a man.
I love that scene so much. I love The Master.
It's my favorite Paul Thomas Anderson movie. I absolutely love it.
I do want to note that Hubbard was a bit of an explorer, and it started young, but not just of the world, of the mind.
So when he was roughly 12 years old, he went on a cruise from Seattle to D.E.
and one of his fellow passengers was a man named Joseph Thompson,
who was a member of the Navy Medical Corps who studied under Sigmund Freud.
So Thompson really apparently, quote, beat Freud into him.
You want to have sex with your mother.
You want to have sex with your mother.
It's like, I know.
And he said that he wanted to follow out this work,
but his dad said that he was going to be an engineer.
So he went to college and he studied engineering,
but he did not have a knack for it.
He got really bad grades.
He didn't graduate.
But it's not to say that Hubbard was unintelligent.
He had a superpower, and that was writing.
Writing prolifically.
Yeah.
So, Lizzie, we talked about this when we covered Battlefield Earth.
But by the time Hubbard's in his 20s, he is churning out stories for Pulp Magazine,
sci-fi adventures, westerns.
He would write to the point where he was dripping sweat.
He would write on a roll of butcher paper.
So when he was done with one story, he'd just tear it off and continue on the next one while it was delivered to the publisher.
He had to write under pseudonyms because the magazines didn't want the readers to keep seeing Elron Hubbard's name popping up multiple times in one issue.
So you got Mr. Spectator, Captain Humbert Reynolds, Renee Lafayette, Winchester Remington Colt, which is just three guns in a row.
And he was self-conscious or may have been a bit self-conscious about the speed at which he wrote.
He came across at one point some praise of another writer where the reader who wrote in said that this writer was, quote,
prolific, but a genius nonetheless, as if being prolific was a bad thing.
Right.
He then wrote, quote, just why is it, pray tell, that John Public and Hollywood,
I think that's an important thing that he includes there,
dwells in the dark about a fast production writer.
If a man writes one story a year, everybody says, ah, he must be an artist.
No merit to a man who works himself bald and into an early grave,
putting out repeated bits of the marvelous.
He didn't go entirely bald, but he went a little bit bald.
So it was like, oh, is that personal?
He then name checks, oh, Henry, Dickens, Sir Walter Scott.
And he more or less says that his brain is like a shark.
If he stops swimming, he dies.
And then he says, you know, the layman would faint from shock if they witnessed the speed
at which the true literary heavyweights, quote, rolled out the yardage.
So he's a little bit defensive.
And he, again, to be clear, he is remarkably prolific.
Actually, he's the most prolific writer in history.
He has a Guinness World Record.
He has the Guinness World Record for the most published works by a single author, 10084.
If at first you don't succeed, try 1,084 times again.
And he was coming up during the Golden Age of Science Fiction.
He's born at the right time for this.
He wrote for astounding stories under editor John Campbell,
and he was friends with other famous writers,
including one of the fathers of that golden age,
who we've talked about, Robert Heinlein, who would write Starship Troopers.
Now, he sniffed around Hollywood.
We do know that Columbia optioned one of his stories, and they made it into a serial movie,
The Secret of Treasure Island.
But the question is, how did Elron Hubbard go from science fiction to fictional science?
And to explore that, we got to get into World War II in his history in the Navy.
So he served in the Navy, and ultimately, after he'd set off a billion death charges,
he wound up in the hospital.
And medical records show that, you know, he greatly exaggerated his.
condition. Elron Hubbard, he was just, he is a fabulous, like, that's what he does.
According to his diaries, though, it seems like he truly believed that he was in a, quote,
hopeless state. So this is from his personal diaries. Blinded with injured optic nerves and lame
with physical injuries to hip and back at the end of World War II, I faced an almost non-existent
future. I was abandoned by my family and friends as a supposedly hopeless cripple. To be clear,
his first marriage fell apart, and he did struggle for years, mentally, physically, and financially.
And in 1947, he wrote to the VA, Veterans Affairs, to ask for help.
Quote, I am utterly unable to approach anything like my own competence.
My last physician informed me that it might be very helpful if I were to be examined
and perhaps treated psychiatrically or even by a psychoanalyst.
I avoided out of pride any mental examinations, hoping that time would balance a mind which I
every reason to suppose was seriously affected.
I cannot myself afford such a treatment.
Would you please help me?
Yeah, the aversion to psychology and psychiatry is so interesting
because, you know, as many are quick to point out to his face,
what you are selling seems to be a version of psychoanalysis.
And he's so quick to say, no, no, no, that's for crazy people.
And I don't know if it's because it was rejected by, like, the board of psychologists or what the deal is there, why he's so afraid of it.
It's interesting. I think this was definitely a time, as we'll get to, when people were skeptical of psychiatric and psychological treatments.
And Hubbard, it seems, didn't get the help he sought at first because he was too proud and then because his prayer or letter was not answered.
and he falls in with a different far more fringe crowd.
Ordo Templi Orientis.
So this is a black magic cult that traces back to German-speaking occultists
and then was taken over by Alistair Crowley in 1910.
The gist of it is this particular sect of this cult was obsessed with the idea of impregnating
a woman with the Antichrist, basically.
Yes, and he's based in Pasadena. Hey, shout out.
That's right.
He then experimented with hypnotism, and according to some sources,
he wrote a document called the affirmations or the admissions,
where he basically tried to therapeutize himself with a list of mantras.
Quote, the purpose of this experiment is to reestablish the ambition,
willpower, desire to survive, the talent and confidence of myself.
I feel like there's just this interesting portrait of this person
who really felt like he maybe had a purpose
and he had willpower and desire and a place in the world,
and then after World War II, he is completely decent.
stabilized, and he is just trying, he's grasping at a lot of different straws.
So eventually he claims, at least that he started volunteering in a psychiatric clinic,
and he wrote some letters to Robert Heinlein claiming that he was curing patients of physical
ailments. So, for example, one week ago I brought in my first asthma cure. I have an arthritis
to finish tomorrow, and so it goes. This is at a psychiatric clinic. So he's making claims that
basically many of these physical ailments are in people's heads, and I can solve them through.
So it's not like a laying on of hands. It's like these are psychosomatic conditions that I am.
No, he was very much in, as we'll discuss right now, his method, he was adamant, is science,
not religion. Because he's writing a book about this method. And he's, and he really believes it works.
In fact, he believes it works on kids. He said, quote,
I took a scared little kid who was supposed to be stupid and was failing everything and worked on him about 35 hours just to make sure.
That was last month. So now he turns up this afternoon with all A's and all of a sudden he's reading Shakespeare.
We should remember later on, Tom Cruise, for example, would claim that Scientology cured his dyslexia.
So Hubbard calls this book Dianetics, which in the book it says it's pulled from the Greek Daya meaning through and Nose meaning mind.
I also read it was pulled from the Greek word Diannoia, which means.
means intellect or mind. It doesn't really matter. The point is the book presents itself as
irrefutable science. I bought a copy. I was reading through it, reading through the beginning.
This is not a theory. This is not religion. This is fact. This is proven fact. In fact,
these concepts have been around for thousands of years and nobody has ever been able to distill
them or bring them together. You know, we've gotten close a couple of times. When were those times?
Don't worry about it. But I have figured it out. How did I figure out? Don't worry. Don't
worry about it. How does it work? Don't worry about it. It's a lot of just definitive,
declarative, this work statements without a lot of this is the process through which I came to
these conclusions. But let's talk about the core concepts. The first one is the idea that all people
have two minds. There's the analytical mind, which is logical conscious, self-aware,
records and stories information, solves problems, and the reactive mind, which houses fears,
insecurities, and painful sense memories. Quote, it does not remember. It records and uses the
recordings only to produce action. It does not think. It selects recordings and impinges them upon
the conscious mind and the body without the knowledge or consent of the individual. I mean, this is not
particularly far from Freud. Exactly. So these subconscious recordings of painful memories,
he calls ngrams, and they cause, quote, psychosomatic illnesses. Individuals can uncover, re-experience,
and refile these N-grams via dionetic therapy with a trained auditor who could be a therapist or just a friend.
And with enough therapy, you can reach your highest, most stable form known as going clear.
Excuse me, with enough auditing, Chris.
With enough auditing.
Yeah, you can reach clear.
Like you mentioned, Lizzie, it mixes therapy speak with things like transcendental meditation.
He is pulling, it is the George Lucas, right?
It is a pastiche master, right, at play here.
So he sells an excerpt of the book to his old editor Campbell, who says,
great, I will publish this in astounding science fiction, which seems like a burst.
fit because it's kind of science fiction. But to be clear, Campbell's saying this is not science fiction.
This is real. I want to read part of the introduction that he wrote. This article is not a hoax,
joke or anything but a direct clear statement of a totally new scientific thesis. I know Dianetics is
one of, if not the greatest discovery of all man's written and unwritten history. It produces the
sort of stability and sanity men have dreamed about for centuries. And Campbell wasn't just being a
supportive friend or an outlier. Dianetics, the modern science of mental health, was published in
May of 1950, and it stayed on the New York Times bestseller list for 28 weeks. It was part of a bigger
trend. So post-World War II, there's a large therapeutic culture that's developing, that's
blending religion with psychology. Well, but to be clear, this is not being positioned as religion
at this point. No, but it's taking elements of that and it's putting it with therapy into
what's really being born is self-help in a lot of ways.
Right.
It's not just the public that's interested in these ideas that seem far-fetched.
You know, you've got institutes that are dedicated to ESP and P-K exploration, both privately and publicly.
You know, the Soviets and the United States government have launched respective programs that are exploring anomalous mental phenomena.
And a lot of this was spurred by the discovery of Himmler's research into the occult during World War II.
It's all tied together.
But unlike the U.S. government's pursuit of knowledge for military superiority,
Hubbard's positioning Dianetics as a means to, quote, denuclearize the world.
He says,
Dianetics addresses war because there is, in fact, a race between the science of the mind and the atom bomb.
There may be no future generation to know which won.
And a New York Times critic even wrote,
History has become a race between Dianetics and catastrophe.
Very smart marketing.
This book will save the world.
So Americans were also skeptical of psychoanalysis and psychiatry and may have been looking for an alternative that was less European, less Jewish, less expensive, and faster.
They're looking for a life hack.
Yeah.
Hubbard claimed that he could accomplish in 20 hours what psychoanalysis took years to achieve.
Yeah, he's looks maxing self-help.
Also, psychiatry was, to be fair, experimenting with some questionable methods, including lobotomies and a lot of.
electroshock therapy. Hubbard's also offering certainty. He compared dionetics to the discovery of
fire. He said it's simpler than physics or chemistry, but far more useful and that it is an exact science.
He had no medical license. He had no formal scientific data. A lot of psychologists, though,
actually claimed that they incorporated some aspects of dionetics into their work.
I mean, look, in terms of asking you to basically re-experience potentially traumatic memories
and to like allow yourself to be open to the possibility of, you know, things that may come to the surface that you are not aware of and then to actually walk you back through experiencing them. Yes, those are real treatments. Those exist in other forms of, you know, psychoanalysis and they do, there is evidence to suggest that they work. I don't know that they are entirely original to Elron Hubbard at all. And also, when you put them in the context of what he was doing with them, they become an awful lot.
less legitimate. Yeah. So to be clear, most of the scientific community has rejected Dianetics
outright, and they did at the time. Lawrence Wright said they saw it as, quote, you know,
psychological folk art. One critic said basically Hubbard has started to believe the fiction that
he's written. Yes. Anybody writing several million words of fantasy in science fiction should
ultimately begin to internalize the assumptions underlying the verbiage. Dynamics was called a cult,
a fast-selling mental snakebite remedy, the poor man's psychoanalysis. And it was a major craze.
Hubbard traveled the country giving lectures. He would sell $500 professional auditor courses. People started auditing each other at home. This reminds me later in the 80s, you'd have Yuri Geller, if you remember Lizzie, who would bend spoons famously. And you'd have spoonbending parties at home. The crowd that was most interested, according to Wright, was young to middle-aged white-collar Protestants who had a pronounced interest in science fiction. Some saw it as a promising new field to work in. Others were looking for a new faith. And a lot of people, Lizzie, just had
mental and physical issues and were desperate for a cure.
And Dianetics comes in as a quick fix.
And what industry loves a quick fix, especially with its persnickety little actors?
Hollywood.
That's right.
Your actress is having weird confidence problems?
Audit.
Ah.
Your actor is having a hard time with his accent?
He needs not it.
One newspaper claimed that three film studios had consulted Hubbard about how to use his
method to, quote, make movie stars.
better than ever. Hubbard claims
to have fixed Kim Hunter's attempt
at a Southern accent when he was visiting the set
of a streetcar named Desire. And then he
witnessed Betsy Drake and Patricia
Neil, come on, Patricia,
auditing one another. He even claimed
that Dianetics would cut down on Hollywood
suicides and divorces. And he
hired Richard D'Mille,
son of Cecilby D'Demill as
his personal assistant. So Dianetics
burns bright, but it burns
fast. If you search for mentions
of the word Dianetics in California newspapers,
in the year 1950, you get nearly 2,000 results in 1951 that drops to just under 1,000,
and in 52, it's only 118. And even some of Hubbard's closest supporters, like Don Campbell's
brother-in-law, who was a physician, cut ties with him when they realized that the science behind it
wasn't exactly formal. Plus, as you know, Lizzie, Elron Hubbard spends a lot of money.
He goes into debt, declares bankruptcy, one of his financial backers, claims ownership of
Dianetics assets and copyrights. And Hubbard showed that he was,
far from clear. They go into much more detail about this and going clear, but in the two years
since the book was published, he kidnapped his own daughter, absconded with her to Cuba,
had a bunch of affairs, destroyed his marriage to his second wife, who married him under threat
of suicide, and he was abusive towards physically and emotionally. And then he married again,
and also all three of his marriages overlapped. Technically, he was a bigamist. He was a serial bigonist.
Well, Chris, are you a bigamist, though, if you are an operating Thetan?
Yes, still. No. No. No.
Rules don't apply.
But several articles that debated the legitimacy of Dianetics in the early 50s
concluded that if nothing else, it demonstrated the craving of many Americans for improved
mental care.
And maybe that's why it would survive with a little rebrand.
So Hubbard goes to Europe, pivots to something new, Scientology.
Which wasn't really a new name.
I didn't know this.
The name existed before.
A British philologist had used it to refer to pseudoscientific theories in the early 20th
century, and then a German philosopher who believed in racial hygiene, used it again in the 1930s.
And Hubbard just said, well, nobody's heard it for a while. I'll use it for my thing right now.
Yeah. So in Scientology was not at odds with Dianetics, it just expanded it. And this is where we go from
kind of pseudoscience self-help book into religion. The core concept that's added here is
what you just mentioned, Lizzie, the concept of an immortal human soul known as a Thayton, T-H-E-T-A-N.
Now, initially it was not introduced as a religious concept, and Hubbard tried to make.
make it seem scientific. And by this point, he had introduced what's, I think, perhaps the most
well-known aspect of Scientology, which is the electrosycomitore or the E-meter. Lizzie, could you
describe, you just watch it going clear, could you describe the E-meter to me? I can't, are people
wearing something when they're... Yeah, it's like one-third of a lie detector test, basically. You're
gripping two metal tubes. Okay, that's right. You grip the rods, essentially. And then someone is
operating the E-meter, and what they're doing is they're watching a needle, and they're, they're
saying, like, as they see the needle move, they're asking you to, like, return to the memory
or the thought that you had depending on certain movements of the needle. And then the whole
point is to release that thought or that engram, right? Yes. The idea is, like, the higher the
reading, the more intense, the engram that you're exploring. And what we learn what we're
really getting into, or we will get into, is blackmail very, very quickly. Yeah. But at this
point in time, he's expanding all of these concepts. So Ngrams now include prenatal memories,
aka, quote, sperm dreams, past lives. And past lives, this was very popular at the time.
You know, even in today, there's fascination with the idea of recovered memories, for example,
and there's not a lot of science behind that, and it's, like, very debated how valid this is,
and you get into issues with, you know, for example, like a lot of the satanic panic was built around.
Yes, the famous example of this is Michelle remembers.
during the satanic panic.
If you're not familiar with what that is,
very worth looking at.
Also, fun fact, my dad was at a cocktail party at one point
and somewhat recently,
and I believe a woman started referring to her,
like, past life trauma with him.
And he, I think, exited the conversation relatively quickly.
My point is that, you know,
it feels the way that Hubbard packages this feels unusual,
but he's, again, taking a lot of concepts
that have purchase in different, you know,
groups and parts of the country.
Sure. And I also want to be clear, if something helps you, I don't care. Like, do whatever you want. It's when it becomes something you are pushing on other people or using to control or manipulate other people that it becomes a problem.
Let's talk about those other people. So Hubbard starts giving lectures in 52. He starts publishing a series of books, which would later become, you know, The History of Man, Scientology 8-808088, the factors. And he is preaching to acquire. This is the most loyal group of his followers. And he, you know, he needs to turn this into.
a scalable business. So he introduces the idea of franchising. The idea is basically like
satellite organizations are going to pay him for the training, plus a 10% tithe, basically,
so they can practice his techniques. And in 1953, he officially converts Scientology into a
religion. Why? For money. Yeah. This is a quote from Hubbard. If a man really wanted to make
a million dollars, the best way to do it would be to start a religion. Now, Hubbard wasn't
sure how people would react to the religion angle. He even asked his secretary for her opinion.
In early 1953, he wrote to her, I await your reaction on the religion angle. In my opinion,
we couldn't get worse public opinion than what we have had or have less customers with what we've
got to sell. I sure could make it stick. I think he viewed the religion angle as necessary to the
financial future of Scientology. And it turns out he's pivoting at the right time because the
U.S. is experiencing another post-war religious boom.
Hubbard creates the Hubbard Scientology Association of America.
He opens churches in New Jersey, California, D.C.
He encourages franchise holders around the country to convert their Scientology and
genetics facilities into independent churches.
And if you guys have seen the Going Clear documentary, you may be familiar with the
Scientology strategy or term fair game.
Basically, anytime the church is attacked in any way, attack back with force.
Think Sean Connery's speech in The Untouchables.
Lizzie, you could do a better accent than me, but, you know, they pull a knife, you pull a gun.
He sends one of yours to the hospitals.
You send one of theirs to the morgue.
That's the Scientology Way.
Great.
So as early as 1955, he's writing to his followers that we should be very alert to sue for slander at the slightest chance
so as to discourage the public press from mentioning Scientology, which is not exactly a turn-the-other-cheek methodology.
But while he wanted to keep Scientology out of the press, he did want attention from one specific group.
Lizzie, who did he want attention from?
Hollywood.
Hollywood. Hollywood was a key part of Hubbard's strategy. In an early issue of Scientology magazine
called Ability, he described Project Celebrity. I can't remember if he talked about Project Celebrity
Battlefielders. I think we did. Just to recap, celebrities are key to success of Scientology.
When they talk, America listens. And the goal of the operation is to stock these, quote,
prime communicators and pressure them into an auditing session. He's looking to make an army of influencers.
He included in the magazine a list of celebrities, and he told the reader to pick one and, quote,
write us at once, so the notable will be yours to hunt without interference.
It will be up to you to learn what you can about your quarry and put yourself at every hand
across his or her path, not permitting discouragements or clerks or secretaries to intervene in the days,
weeks, or months.
These celebrities are well-guarded, well-barricated, overworked, aloof quarry.
If you bring one of them home, you will get a source.
small plaque as your reward.
Which, like, that's not a big prize for bag and a fish like these.
Do you want to hear some of the names?
Yeah.
These are, these are a list of published names in this magazine.
And sorry, what year is this?
It'd be 1995.
Okay.
Or so, the mid to late 50s.
Yeah, 1955.
Okay.
I'll read some names.
Edward Aramero, Ed Sullivan, Marlina Dietrich, Orson Wells, Ernest Hemingway,
Sid Caesar, Liberace, John Ford, Jimmy Stewart, Howard Hughes, I feel like you could have gotten him,
Billy Graham, Bob Hope, Walt Disney, Milton Burrell, Jackie Gleason, Joe Lewis, Vincent Price, Groucho Marx,
Daryl Zanick, Cecil B. DeMille, Bing Crosby, Greta Garbo, and many, many more.
It definitely means male, and it's very high level.
It's also just a shotgun blast.
There's not a lot of like...
There's no strategy.
No.
There's no cohesive of thought here.
There's people in there that I don't know that you want advertising your religion, even at the time.
And then there's people that make a ton of sense.
Ed Sullivan, Bob Hope, like these people that could really legitimize it, Jimmy Stewart.
There's certain names on there.
You're not getting Marlena Dietrich.
Are you kidding?
She would rip your hairpiece off.
Like, there's no way.
Even like Pablo Picasso's.
Oh, yeah.
Good luck there, too.
So the church starts attracting unwanted attention.
In 1963, the FDA raided the D.C. church, and they seized its e-meters because Scientology
had claimed they could cure neuroses, psychosis, schizophrenia, and all psychosomatic illnesses.
So obviously, if you're going to make a claim that you have a product that can clear, you have
to get FDA approval.
Yeah.
So as they grow, Hubbard creates a more formal system.
He's got a PR department.
He's got an intelligent system that's investigating the communists and criminals that criticize
Scientology. We discussed this before, Lizzie, he makes the C-org, which is his private Navy,
but it's basically, you know, his clergy, and it's almost a form of slave labor. He introduces the
concept of a suppressive person. This is somebody who's in any way critical of the church or
its practices, the policy of disconnection, which is where you cut off, you know, anybody in your
life who is not supportive of your endeavors. Again, these are things that are used in
multi-level marketing, for example, very commonly. Very commonly.
Very common in cults.
Yeah.
And then he formalizes the concept of the fair game law.
The fair game, by the way, is like everything is fair game when it comes to us dealing with a suppressive person.
They can be tricked, lied to, or destroyed.
Right.
He also established the structure of paying for subsequent levels of enlightenment along the bridge of total freedom.
So the bridge of total freedom is the levels that you go up to reach your clear status, the operating Thayton levels.
It's, again, multi-level marketing structure, self-help life coaching structure, wellness structure.
These are a lot of the same practices used in marketing and branding, for example, for these very
manipulative business practices.
Well, and I think something that the documentary does such a good job of explaining is that so much
of this becomes sunk cost.
Because when you are paying for each rung of the bridge, not a ladder, as you said, you might
really like what's in one, and then you get to the next level.
it's really fucking weird. And then you go, okay, well, I already paid for three of these. So I'm
going to see what the next one is. And then it goes on and on and on. And I don't know if you noticed
this, by the way, but I know that when you get to a certain level of clear, you get to open the
briefcase and you get to read the creation story of Scientology. And all I could think about when
they were talking about that was John Travolta opening the briefcase in Pulp Fiction. And I was like,
is Quinn Tarantino doing that on purpose?
And the whole idea in Pulpiction is that it's Marcellus Wallace's soul, right, in the suitcase, which is also interesting with the Satan.
You know, I don't know if that was on purpose by Tarantino or not, but it is interesting.
I also do want to mention, you know, this does evoke indulgences from the Catholic Church, which was a practice from hundreds of years prior where, you know, you could reduce the amount of punishment that you underwent for your forgiven sins by paying the church.
And it, you know, it started as a way to raise money for charitable causes and then quickly became corrupted.
something gnarly, as most of these things do. They can start with interesting, potentially
helpful ideas or the desire to help yourself or other people, and it can metastasize in kind of gnarly
ways.
So, in part, there is a tendency for key practitioners to break off and start their own sects.
So Hubbard introduced also the idea that some levels of Scientology must be kept confidential.
So we also get the first rule of Fight Club. Don't talk about Fight Club.
So the public attention was a double-edged sort.
Some felt it was doing Scientology more harm than good.
But as you mentioned Lizzie earlier, others argue that the government raids made Scientology
look like an underdog, right?
They were able to exploit this sort of victim status constantly.
So in 67, the IRS officially revoked their tax exempt status.
And by this point, Hubbard's gone back to Europe, settled in England.
He's established the Scientology Worldwide Management Control Center.
And in the mid-70s, he really ups his game by assigning his wife to head,
Operation Snow White, which is an organized infiltration of U.S. government agencies that were critical
of Scientology. Basically, they send Scientologists out to get jobs at the IRS and FTC, for example,
and steal files to use as blackmail. It's crazy. Yeah. So at the same time, he's buying historic
LA buildings. The Chateau Echateau-Elise. Is that how you say it, Lizzie? That's the Celebrity Center
now. An Operation Celebrity had started to attract some big names. So,
Leonard Cohen took classes in New York.
Priscilla Presley joined.
Jerry Seinfeld took a communication course in the mid-70s.
Chick-Korea read the Red Dianetics in the late 60s.
He became involved in the church.
Chick-Korea is on the album Space Jazz that is featured in Battlefield Earth.
Yes.
Yep.
Anne Archer in 1975.
Yeah.
She was formerly a Christian scientist, and then she converted to Scientology.
That was kind of another common thing was like, you know,
the more obscure Christian.
sect or Pentecostal sect and then you move in Scientology. Well, now I'm team Glenn Close in
Fatal Attraction. What can I tell you? Well, Lizzie, who was the big fish that converted in
1975? We just talked about it. John Travolta. John Travolta at the age of 21. This is the same year
he gets his big break in Welcome Back Cotter, Vinnie Barbariano. Right. So why were these
celebrities attracted to Scientology? We talked about this a little bit earlier, but Jenna Miscavich,
niece of David Miscavich, argues that the experience of Scientology for celebrities is much different
than the average person.
So unlike the average person,
they're not going to be hounded for money, right?
You can move through the coursework at your own pace.
They are not exposed to any of the corruption behind the curtain.
So, you know, low wages, poor living conditions,
going clear goes into this in more detail.
They're offered communication courses
that are, you know, cater to their industry.
Let us help you feel more comfortable in your auditions.
Let us improve your networking, for example.
I think it's hard to express or hard to capture sometimes
how insecure it can feel even when you're succeeding in Hollywood.
You really feel like you are one false step away from falling all the way back down to the bottom.
And also, you know, and they discussed this in the documentary as well,
but any major successes you are having at that time,
Scientology is really set up to convince you that those are because of Scientology.
So.
Well, and at least it makes it enough of a question, right?
Which is like, it's like a good luck charm.
Exactly.
Like, you've got this wrap.
You know what I mean?
Foot, like in your pocket that is Scientology.
And you, I mean, again, actors, athletes, anybody who performs, I feel like is perhaps more
superstitious in some ways, right?
We know this, like, we all, we develop a routine that we don't want to break.
And if we do, oh, that's why this didn't go right.
And so this plays into that.
Yes.
And also, we talk about this on the podcast all the time.
But actors are, just by nature of the position, they have, potentially.
potentially the least control over their own careers out of almost any position in Hollywood.
And that's not knocking actors because it takes an enormous amount of mental fortitude to be able to deal
with that.
Oh, yeah, that has nothing to do with them.
It's just the way the system is designed.
Right.
They're entirely fungible at the end of the day.
It is not an accident that the people that they are mostly targeting are not creators so much
as they are actors.
And bad press can destroy an actor.
And so the auditing process, as Lawrence Wright points out, and the church's attitude toward defectors, and the fact that, especially under David Miscavage, they film and record these auditing sessions, means that the celebrities...
Exactly. It means that sometimes the celebrities who have joined are very vulnerable if they leave. The organization literally has recordings of your deepest, darkest secrets, and their policy is to attack their critics. And to be clear, much of this is illegal. So in 1979, five-sumns.
Scientology members, including Hubbard's third wife, Mary Sue, were fined and sentenced to prison
for their involvement in Operation Snow White. And in 1980, just before he turned 69, Hubbard went into
seclusion. Two years later, he published What Lizzie? Battlefield Earth that we discuss. And
space jazz, it's accompanying soundtrack. Indeed. A space opera. And, you know, it's interesting.
It did not get terrible reviews. It got very mixed reviews. Some people said, it's, look, this
is kind of nonsense. And other people said, look, this is a fun ride that harkens back to the
golden age of science fiction.
But we also know is that the church reportedly pressured members into buying multiple copies of it to make sure it was a bestseller.
The New York Times reported that two Scientology organizations bought 30,000 copies of the book at discount directly from the publisher.
And it seems like in part that was because they wanted to make sure that somebody would buy the film rights, because Hubbard, I think, desperately wanted it to become a movie.
But Hubbard would never see it reached the screen.
The film rights were purchased, but it wouldn't become a movie until 1999, I believe, as we've discussed in Battle of,
Field Earth, and Hubbard died in January of 1986 at the age of 74 at his ranch just outside
of San Luis Obispo. He had a stroke in his sleep. No, he didn't, Chris. He went to a new level of
clear. Well, no, they did. They do say that. I mean, they say that, you know, he will continue
his work without his body. Exactly. That's the announcement that David Miscavage made.
To be fair, that's kind of what a lot of religions more or less preach and believe. I think,
if you think about a lot of the organizations that came before Scientology in Los Angeles,
these are such personality-driven endeavors in so many ways.
And so I think there was a real question as to whether or not Scientology would really last after Elron Hubbard.
But it has this kind of interesting situation of almost like a dual succession that takes place.
Internally, you've got David Miskavage.
And Lizzie, you know David Miscabbage.
You saw him in the documentary.
How would you describe David Misc cabbage to somebody?
Scary.
A Tom Cruise and intensity, perhaps?
Yes, beyond Tom Cruise.
Yeah.
It's if Elrond Hubbard, like, look, does Elrond Hubbard look like Dr. Finklstein from Nightmare
Before Christmas?
Yes.
But when you watch videos of him, there is a source.
certain warmth to him, where I think you could understand how his charisma came into play
when forming this religion. David Miscavich is completely devoid of charisma. He's like,
if you took the darkness behind Tom Cruise's eyes and gave it 0% of his charm, that's David
Miss Cavitch. He reads as
so determined, so
intent,
so deeply
sure of himself.
He's very scary to watch.
He's a zealot, is the way I would describe it.
Through and through.
He
had been, to be clear, had been a
Scientologist since age 11.
Miss Cabbage was effectively born into this
or brought into it by his parents. This is not somebody
who came to this in adulthood. He was raised
in Scientology since age 11.
And he had been close with Hubbard from a young age.
He was, you know, he would assist him as like an assistant cameraman on some of their, you know, internal video productions, et cetera.
In 1986, Miss Cabbage takes over, and this is the same year that Scientology attracts its biggest celebrity yet.
Lizzie?
Timmy.
Thomas.
Mapathor.
Yeah.
The second or third or fourth.
Tom Cruise.
Can't remember.
Tom Cruise.
He'd been introduced to the religion through his first wife, Mimi Rogers, and he had just starred in Top Gun.
Tom Cruise is one of the biggest stars on the planet at this point, and his star will only continue to rise for the next 10 to 20 years.
He developed a close relationship with Miss Cabbage, and he later credited Scientology with curing his dyslexia.
Now, Scientology, to be clear, is under increasing pressure at this time.
There's a class action suit from former members.
they were ordered to pay $30 million to another former member,
although I did read that they appealed and settled that out of the court.
And Ms. Cavage was trying to clean up the church's image.
So a 91-time magazine article called Scientology a ruthless global scam
that was aiming from the mainstream.
According to the cult awareness network,
no group prompts more telephone pleas for help than does Scientology,
and they were still battling the IRS for tax exemption.
So according to Lauren's right,
thousands of Scientologists simultaneously sued the IRS
and individual IRS employees,
which contributed to the IRS eventually granting Scientology tax-exempt status in 1993.
The story goes, basically, you know,
we'll make these lawsuits go away if you give us our status.
And it becomes this huge win.
You can see the video.
Lizzie, you saw it.
It's like, you know, Ms. Cavage announcing to a stadium full of Scientologists
that the, quote, war is over.
Do you know what's amazing about that announcement, though,
is that he doesn't say the war is over
because we have been recognized as,
a legitimate religion. What he says is the war is over. We are officially tax-exempt.
Sir, at least fake it. Like, I understand all you care about is the money, but you can...
Well, you know, what he says is like, you can, finally, you will get tax deductions on all the
donations. You make the science. Oh, my God. It's interesting. Yeah, it's all about the business.
Yeah. But then their best soldier goes a bit, MIA. Because of one tall Australian drink of water.
That's right. He meets and marries Nicole Kidman. He met her working on Days of Thunder. Her father was a well-known psychologist in Australia, aka by his very nature in SP, a suppressive person. So Kidman gets labeled a PTSD, potential trouble source. So former members claim that there was a coordinated campaign to drive Cruz and Kidman apart. But I actually think in what is such an odd and
and ironic twist, it may have been Stanley Kubrick, who was most responsible for ending their marriage,
and in a way, returning Tom Cruise to the very religion that had attracted his daughter away
and caused an estrangement between Kubrick and his daughter, Vivian. So Vivian had become a
Scientologist in the 90s, and she and her father had stopped talking. So at the same time,
the shoot is, you know, again, this is a troubled shoot. We covered it on this podcast, Lizzie,
just how much it may have contributed to Cruz and Kidman's marital issues, we will never know.
There is an incredible amount of speculation, but we do know that they divorced in 2001.
I want to say this, because I feel like we grew up in the era of there being so many stories about Tom Cruise, which I'm sure we'll get into.
And many of them were that, oh, Tom Cruise is secretly gay.
And, like, that's the thing that Scientology is hiding and that, oh, this marriage to Nicole Kidman was entirely arranged.
I just want to say that makes zero sense.
I 100% believe that these two were in love with each other,
that there's, he had no, there was nothing advantageous for him about being with her
from the perspective of Scientology, which he was extremely embedded in.
And it made it very hard for him.
Like, I think they, I think they were absolutely real.
And I understand the appeal on both sides.
I agree with you.
And this brings us kind of, we're coming up.
now to War of the Worlds and where we're going to touch off on Monday.
So I'm not a fan of religion, as our audience knows, any religion.
It tends not to be for me, but I went to a memorial last weekend, and so I was back
into church.
I don't often go into churches, and I was reminded of the power of these institutions.
You go into a church, and I mean, there is something a bit awe-inspiring about it.
There is something about being in a space where everybody's facing the same direction and
dedicate it's the same thing, and you're not on your phone, and
And there is something solemn and spiritual about it.
I find it so fascinating that at this exact moment, so the cruise of the 90s, you look at the roles that he's taking, right?
And it culminates in 99 with these two fascinating roles in Magnolia and eyes wide shut.
Both of which feel about as far from the image that they had been crafting for him as you could get.
And are two of his best performances.
to deeply flawed men with shattered ideas of masculinity in very different ways.
I think the Kubrick shoot, he would never say anything bad about Kubrick.
Cruz never says anything bad about the people he works with for the most part.
I think that shoot was incredibly disillusioning for him working with his hero and not having it go well famously.
Infamously, Kubrick was extremely positive toward Kidman and supportive of her performance and then made Cruz do everything a hundred times.
And I think it broke Tom Cruise's brain as an actor.
And what I find so interesting then is that if you look at his transition into the early 2000s,
he goes back into the fold with Scientology.
And almost all of the movies that he starts taking in the early 2000s are big budget action hero movies.
Yeah, very safe.
Not all of them, but many.
And, you know, we're talking a Minority Report, The Last Samurai, Mission Impossible 2.
I know collateral is an outlier in that he plays the villain in that one.
his star rises in the world of Scientology,
and he gets put in a way on this collision course with War of the Worlds,
where on the one hand, it makes complete sense that he's going to tackle a movie
that has so many things to do with the Golden Age of Science Fiction
and given his relationship with Elron Hubbard,
and it makes complete sense that he and Spielberg are going to team up again.
But all of the worlds that Cruz had so expertly kept separate from one another,
in a lot of ways,
collide in a very spectacular fashion
with the release of War of the Worlds,
which we will get into on Monday.
So, Lizzie, that really concludes our coverage of, you know,
the history of Scientology, how Tom Cruise came into it,
and where the organization stood when we were heading into the early to mid-2000s.
It really is interesting because, and we've talked about this with Tom Cruise before,
But the roles that he took prior to this turning point, and it really is, the divorce with
Nicole Kidman and eyes wide shot really is an enormous turning point for him both personally and
professionally. It's a turning point in the way that he is perceived, which I think goes in a direction
that he did not anticipate when we get into, you know, Katie Holmes and everything. But what it looks
like to me is that he experienced one of the most destabilizing situations in his life,
both on that movie set and in the dissolution of his marriage to Nicole Kidman.
And what Scientology then offers him is absolute certainty.
If you watch these videos of him being awarded, and this is all after, you know, of him on stage with David
miscavage, there will always be a place at that point that he can go where he knows exactly what
he's going to get. And it's going to be, you know, total adoration and power. And that is the Church
of Scientology. Now, we don't know how aware he is of, you know, the price that he and others are
paying, but it sure looks like he's okay with it. I mean, it's, if you're someone who is deeply
uncomfortable with uncertainty, I totally understand the appeal of what he is being offered by the church.
And we will get into what he offers in return with our coverage of War of the Worlds on Monday.
What Went Wrong is a Sad Boom podcast presented by Lizzie Bassett and Chris Winterbauer. Post-production and music by David Bowman.
