Tom Cruise Slams Female Employee Against Cabinet for Not Showing Him “Proper Respect”
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The Church of Scientology and Mark “Marty” Rathbun have been worst enemies ever since he walked out on leader David Miscavige in 2004, after being his “top lieutenant” for years. In his new book, “The Scientology Reformation: What Every Scientologist Should Know,” Rathbun blows the cover on many secrets of the cult. An excerpt from the chapter called “The Gates of Hell” is now available on Rathbun’s official webpage, just to help you get an idea of the kind of things that happen behind closed doors. It tells of how Tom Cruise, the most prominent representative of Scientology, was taught to mimic Miscavige’s behavior to his most aggressive gesture and how, in almost no time, he converted himself into a chosen one meant to bring “degraded beings” back on the right path through aggression. If true, this account paints Tom in a very negative light, which goes against everything he’s done so far in terms of public image. “[Miscavige] began to tell Tom Cruise tales of having to physically beat the degraded beings in his environment to keep them in line. Cruise followed suit, doing the same to his own staff,” Rathbun writes. “Michael Doven, his long-time personal assistant, started receiving regular physical abuse from Tom. Another of Tom’s staff – a woman – was grabbed and slammed up against a file cabinet by Cruise for failing to show him proper respect,” he goes on to say. In everything that Cruise did, he was looking at Miscavige for “inspiration.” “He railed and screamed, like Miscavige, when he discovered a near-microscopic chip in a drinking glass handed to him by one of his staff. He was convinced the degraded beings were steadily sabotaging him, stalking him like the zombies from Night of the Living Dead. Tom even physically abused the one-time international spokesperson for Scientology, one Tommy Davis,” Rathbun claims. He also roughed up Nazanin Boniadi, the woman Scientology chose as his wife (before he met Katie Holmes) after a proper audition-like process. Rathbun confirms Vanity Fair’s story by writing how she fell out of favor with Tom after she “disrespected” Miscavige by daring to ask him to repeat what he’d said – Miscavige reportedly talks in a very small voice and hates when people ask him the same thing twice. “Dave and me, we’re big beings. We are surrounded by DB’s (degraded beings). DBs can’t help but try to destroy big beings. That’s just the way it is in this universe. You have to understand this. This is LRH, man,” he reportedly told her during a very serious talk down. “It’s the plight of the big being getting jumped on by all the degraded beings. You gotta be unreasonable to survive around a big being like me. You can’t be weak. You gotta be strong to protect the big beings from all the degraded beings,” he added, slamming his fist on the table. More from the controversial book here. Scientology hasn’t yet responded to the claims made by Rathbun, but it will certainly do so in no time: rest assured you will find out about it here when they do.
The venerable Atlantic is being made the poster child for what happens when native advertising goes wrong. An ad industry event in New York raised the question of whether the Atlantic deserves this blame when many other sites engage in similar practices.
You have to feel for the Atlantic. One poor decision has made it a case study in how not to embrace a popular advertising trend — even though many other publications could have gotten away with the same ad.
At an ad industry event in New York on Wednesday, an Atlantic Digital executive explained what the company had learned from a January debacle involving the Church of Scientology. (In case you missed it, the Atlantic pushed the boundaries of so-called “native advertising” by publishing a feel-good “sponsored story”about the religion — or cult, if you prefer — that included only positive reader comments.)
“The biggest mistake in retrospect was that it wasn’t harmonious to our site and it didn’t bring any value to our readers,” said VP and General Manager Kimberly Lau, at the event, which was hosted by native ad shop Sharethrough. “The second mistake was allowing the marketing team to moderate comments in a way that wasn’t transparent.”
Lau’s comments echo the Atlantic’s earlier apologies for the incident which, by all appearances, was a one-off mistake. But her remarks stand out because of where she made them: on a panel with representatives from Gawker, Vice and College Humor — three publications that regularly mix advertising into their editorial process and that expressed sympathy for the Atlantic’s predicament.
“There’s no other way to make money without doing this kind of advertising,” said Vice’s CCO Eddy Moretti, who added that Vice would have run the Scientology story. Meanwhile, Jason Del of Gawker (“a full-service content, event and video shop”) suggested that part of the blowback to the Scientology story came about because the sponsored format was novel to its readers.
So is all this unfair to the Atlantic — so-called native advertising is a lifeline for publishers, why can’t it cash in like everyone else? The problem, as Lau explained, is:
“It goes back to the difference between entertainment and journalism,” she said. “There’s a higher bar for a brand like the Atlantic.”
This goes to the crux of the matter — sites that cater to comedy, entertainment or celebrity news can inject sponsored fare into their streams with relative safety. Serious news and intellectual publications, however, must take extra care to preserve the integrity of their editorial content.
In the bigger picture, this extra scrutiny of news brands may limit their ability to garner new online income. But the good news, for the Atlantic at least, is that the company has been profitable for several years and, according to Lau, 59 percent of its overall advertising revenue is digital.
Speaking of native advertising, be sure to attend paidContent Live this April where Andrew Sullivan and other leading media figures will discuss their business strategies, including native advertising.
The church of Scientology in Sydney is facing hostage-holding accusations after a young Taiwanese woman was hospitalized when she punched through a window at the church in order to, as she initially claimed, escape the church’s headquarters in Dundas, Australia.
The incident occurred in March of 2012 after Alice Wu expressed a desire to leave the church’s Sea Organization headquarters. Wu had signed a billion-year contract with the church in 2011, vowing to join this “elite” branch of the church, ABC News reported Tuesday.
The Sea Org is the “singularly most dedicated” branch of the religious group, according to Scientology.org.
Following her request to leave, she suffered a mental breakdown and was put into isolation, according to Wu’s cousin, Teresa Wu. “She was still offered food but was locked in a room. It is an isolation room in the Sea Organization,” Teresa Wu told ABC.
The church’s lawyer Stuart Gibson denied the allegations claiming she was actually in a “sick bay.”
A statement released by the Church of Scientology said Alice Wu had the flu and was “somewhat delusory” when she cut her hand. The statement also states that a staff member called the hospital as soon as she was hurt.
However, Teresa Wu believes Alice smashed the window because she wanted to leave, she told ABC.
Alice’s medical records revealed that she told hospital staff that Scientology members were holding her hostage, when she arrived at the hospital for treatment. She was later diagnosed with a mental illness.
Isolation is used as part of a procedure to deal with mental breakdowns in the Scientology religion, since the religion is against psychiatric treatment. The lawyer Gibson called the term “isolation” a “derogatory term” and told ABC, “There is no isolation and there’s never been isolation.”
Alice’s brother, Jack Wu, said he contacted a former president of the Church of Scientology in Taiwan, Mei Tsu Lee, to inquire about the situation with his sister. In the recorded conversation ABC obtained, Lee reportedly admitted, “I was with her in the isolation room after she became unstable.”
Alice recently sent an email to ABC’s managing director, Mark Scott, denying allegations of being held hostage or being treated badly by the Church of Scientology.
Teresa Wu said two scientologists took Alice to a notary office to sign the statement that was sent to Scott. Alice’s father claims the document should be annulled because Alice was not in a “good state of mind” when the document was signed.
Despite accusations and claims from Alice’s family members, the Australian Federal Police have not found sufficient evidence to pursue an investigation of breaches to the Migration Act or people trafficking, ABC reported.
Director Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master arrived in theaters with enough Oscar buzz to rock Nigel Tufnel's amplifier.
Audiences mostly rejected the filmmaker's inscrutable story of a lost soul and the Scientology-style mentor who tries to make him whole. Oscar voters did the same Sunday night, althoughThe Master's Philip Seymour Hoffman deserved to take home his second gold statuette.
The film, available this week on Blu-ray and DVD, works better on the small screen despite its lush visual presentation. The expectations are hushed, the performances more intimate, but Anderson's third act still prevents us from thoroughly embracing his mercurial vision of postwar America.
Joaquin Phoenix is Freddie Quell, a World War II veteran with an appetite for homemade booze and women. He's a wreck, but he's thrown a life preserver when he meets Lancaster Dodd (Hoffman) aboard a yacht.
Dodd, known to his followers as The Master, is the man responsible for a Scientology-like movement called The Cause. Dodd takes Freddie in, presumably as a guinea pig for the healing powers of his "process," but Freddie's hunger for trouble isn't easily slaked.
Hoffman is so very good as the film's Master you wish Anderson shed more light on him and his ultimate goals. Is he a genius, a fool, a scoundrel or a sham? The writer/director's slippery approach can still work if the film tugged at our emotions or simply made us care about the curious Master/Freddie bond.
We don't, and that's the biggest reason why Oscar voters simply couldn't honor the film as many expected they would.
Phoenix is mesmerizing in both repose and in frequent bouts of rage, but his performance feels like muscle memory, not that of an actor withdrawing into a role. Far better is Amy Adams as Dodd's loyal wife, a woman willing to stand by her man and kick Freddie aside if that will help The Cause.
The Blu-ray extras fuse the traditional (a nicely packaged combination of outtakes and additional scenes) with the downright puzzling (an hour documentary on WWII veterans from filmmaking legend John Huston which purportedly inspired the creation of Freddie Quell). We're also treated to a, "so raw it's ridiculous" behind-the-scenes segment which ends on a humorous note. We watch Hoffman, Adams and several others in the cast dissolve into laughter while jammed in an elevator.
- See more at: http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Hollywood/2013/02/27/the-master-blu-ray-review#sthash.CwKEHirx.dpuf
About an hour before our post on Tommy Davis and Anne Archer was scheduled to publish this morning, we heard from ABC’s Steve Cannane about a disturbing story airing in Australia at about 6:30 AM Eastern, 10:30 PM Sydney time. It was broadcast just a few minutes ago. Here’s the full script to the segment, but we’re leaving out the young woman’s name for now.
The Church of Scientology in Sydney has been accused of holding a young Taiwanese woman hostage after she suffered a mental breakdown.
[The young woman] was hospitalised last March after she badly cut her hand punching a window at Scientology’s Sydney headquarters.
[The young woman]‘s family claims she hurt herself trying to escape. The Church of Scientology denies the allegations that she ever was held captive or forced to do anything against her will.
The case once again highlights Scientology’s controversial beliefs about psychiatry.
Steve Cannane has this exclusive report for Lateline.
Cannane: At 20 [the young woman] had a bright future. She was living in Taiwan, studying commerce and working part time in a library. Just over a year later her life is in ruins. Mentally ill and unable to work or study, she shuffles down the street like a woman four times her age. Her family blames the Church of Scientology in Australia.
Cousin of the young woman: A 20 year old girl’s life has been destroyed. It is an evil cult, just nothing but an evil cult.
Cannane: In late 2011, not long after being introduced to Scientology, [the young woman] was recruited to the Church’s elite Sea Organisation, signing the standard billion-year contract and moving here to Dundas in Sydney’s west.
The cousin: She was only told that she will do a course, helping her reach a higher level in Scientology. So the Scientologists in Taiwan took [her] to get a deferral in her studies and flew her to Australia immediately.
Cannane: Taiwan has become a key recruiting ground for the Church of Scientology in Sydney. According to former insiders, so many Australian Scientologists have left in recent years that at least half of the staff here now are Taiwanese. These pictures shot from a park next to the church’s headquarters give a rare snapshot of what life is like here…in the morning recruits are drilled in a military-like fashion…marching and saluting before heading off for a long day’s work. [The young woman]‘s family and friends say she soon tired of this life and asked to leave.
The cousin: They put her into a place called the “isolation room.” She was still offered food but was locked in a room. It is an isolation room in the Sea Organisation.
Cannane: One night in March last year [the young woman] smashed a window in the Dundas building, badly damaging her right hand — her family say she was trying to escape. An ambulance was called and [she] was taken to hospital. She was diagnosed with a mental illness. According to her medical records she told hospital staff she had been held hostage by Scientology members. No-one from the Church of Scientology was available for interview, their lawyer Stuart Gibson denies the allegations.
Stuart Gibson, Church of Scientology Lawyer: No look, Stephen, that’s a nonsense. She was at Dundas first of all at her own volition and at all times she was free to leave Dundas. And I might hold up for the camera a couple of photographs of the facility at Dundas which if you can clearly see would hardly say that it’s Fort Knox — people that are there can access and egress that facility easily so that allegation is an absolute nonsense.
Cannane: Was she put in isolation?
Gibson: No she wasn’t put in isolation. I think that is a derogatory term. She was actually in a sick bay.
Cannane: But [the young woman]‘s brother, suspicious of what was going on, recorded a phone conversation from Taiwan with a Scientology official in Sydney. Lateline has been told that is Mei Tsu Lee, a former President of the Church of Scientology in Taiwan. In the conversation Ms Lee admits [the young woman] was placed in isolation.
Mei Tsu Lee: I was with her in the isolation room after she became unstable.
Cannane: Mei Tsu Lee was unavailable for interview.
Stuart Gibson, Church of Scientology Lawyer: Well I don’t know, you’d have to take that up with her. The fact is she was in a sick bay. There is no isolation and there’s never been isolation and to use that term is a derogatory term and it was nothing of the case.
Cannane: If isolation is a derogatory term why is it that L Ron Hubbard said you need to put people in isolation when they have a psychotic break?
Gibson: No, that’s not true.
Cannane: I’ve got the statement. It is true, he says anyone who has a psychotic break needs to be placed in isolation.
Gibson: No, we categorically deny that.
Cannane: Here’s Scientology’s official policy on what they call the Introspection Rundown — a procedure to deal with mental breakdowns written by their founder L Ron Hubbard. Under the heading “Isolation” it says, “With someone in a psychotic break, it is necessary to isolate the person for him to destimulate and to protect him and others from possible damage. While in isolation the person receives the Introspection RD done flawlessly on a short session basis, gradiently winning and gaining confidence. Between sessions the muzzled rule is in force. No one speaks to the person or in his hearing.” Hubbard described this policy as a technical breakthrough which possibly ranks with the major discoveries of the Twentieth Century. This policy was followed with tragic consequences in 1995. Lisa MacPherson, a young Scientologist in Florida, had a mental breakdown. Instead of seeking psychiatric treatment the Church of Scientology put her in isolation in a hotel room. She died 17 days later. The Church of Scientology is opposed to psychiatry, labeling it an industry of death.
From “Psychiatry: An Industry of Death” — “In the past four decades nearly twice as many Americans have died in government psychiatric hospitals then in all U.S. wars since 1776.”
Cannane: The day before Lateline was due to interview Scientology’s lawyer, this story took another turn. The ABC’s Managing Director Mark Scott received an email from [the young woman] where she denies she was held against her will, or was treated badly or hurt herself trying to escape. The email says, “I do not give ABC, your reporter or any other media for that matter permission to publicise or use my unfortunate circumstances to your advantage or to vilify an organisation I freely support.” The statement is witnessed by Yu-Lung Chen, a notary from this office in Taiwan and dated February 14, three days after Lateline put forward the allegations to the Church of Scientology. [The young woman]‘s father and cousin later went to the office where she signed the statement
The Cousin: Miss Chen said some people took [the young woman] in to sign the document.
Cannane: The notary involved, Yu-Lung Chen, was unavailable for comment. [The cousin] says the two people who brought [the young woman] here were from the Church of Scientology. [The young woman]‘s father is outraged.
The Father: She has been unstable and she was not in a good state of mind. She didn’t have good judgment and can’t tell right from wrong. I don’t think it was right for her to sign the document. It should be annulled.
Cannane: [The young woman]‘s father says he found out about the statement when a Scientology representative contacted him by phone.
The Father: I had no idea at the start. I heard about it later when their lawyer called me and said an Australian program will be on air. I just said I want like to live a peaceful life and don’t want anything upsetting and I hung up. I was ignored in the past, and they only called me when a program was going to be aired in Australia.
Cannane: Given [the young woman] has been mentally frail how do we know the church hasn’t lent on her to make this statement?
Stuart Gibson, Church of Scientology Lawyer: Well, we don’t know one way or the other, Stephen. I mean, I am only going on my instructions. You may put that, but on my instructions that’s just not the case.
Cannane: In an e-mail to Lateline, Scientology spokesperson Sei Broadhurst said, “[The young woman] has never been coerced or forced into anything by anyone from the Church.” Steve Cannane, Lateline
And a spokesperson from the Australian Federal Police has told Lateline they have investigated [The young woman]‘s case — but found there was insufficient evidence to support any charges in relation to people trafficking or breaches of the migration act.
This report above is from Tony Ortega's site - go to see the terrific comments about this
The Church Of Scientology in Sydney has been accused of holding a young Taiwanese woman hostage after she suffered a mental breakdown. The Church of Scientology denies the allegations.
Transcript
EMMA ALBERICI, PRESENTER: The Church of Scientology in Sydney has been accused of holding a young Taiwanese woman against her will after she suffered a mental breakdown.
Alice Wu was hospitalised last March after a serious cut to her hand caused by punching a window at Scientology's Sydney headquarters.
Alice Wu's family claims she hurt herself trying to escape. She eventually returned to Taiwan.
The Church of Scientology denies allegations that she was held captive or forced to do anything against her will.
The case is said to highlight Scientology's controversial beliefs around psychiatry.
Steve Cannane has this exclusive report for Lateline.
STEVE CANNANE, REPORTER: At 20, Alice Wu had a bright future. She was living in Taiwan, studying Commerce and working part-time in a library.
Just over a year later, her life is in ruins.
Mentally ill and unable to work or study, she shuffles down the street like a woman four times her age.
Her family blames the Church of Scientology in Australia.
TERESA WU, COUSIN OF ALICE (voiceover translation): A 20-year-old girl's life has been destroyed. It is an evil cult, just nothing but an evil cult.
STEVE CANNANE: In late 2011, not long after being introduced to Scientology, Alice Wu was recruited to the Church's elite Sea Organization, signing the standard billion-year contract and moving here to Dundas in Sydney's west.
TERESA WU (voiceover translation): She was only told that she will do a course, helping her to reach a higher level in Scientology. So the Scientologists in Taiwan took Alice to get a deferral in her studies and flew her to Australia immediately.
STEVE CANNANE: Taiwan has become a key recruiting ground for the Church of Scientology in Sydney.
According to former insiders, so many Australian Scientologists have left in recent years that at least half of the staff here now are Taiwanese.
These pictures, shot from a park next to the church's headquarters, give a rare snapshot of what life is like here. In the morning, recruits are drilled in a military-like fashion, marching and saluting before heading off for a long day's work.
Alice's family and friends say she soon tired of life here and asked to leave.
TERESA WU (voiceover translation): They put her into a place called the "isolation room". She was still offered food, but was locked in a room. It is an isolation room in the Sea Organization.
STEVE CANNANE: One night in March last year, Alice Wu smashed a window in the Dundas building, badly damaging her right hand. Her family say she was trying to escape. An ambulance was called and Alice was taken to hospital. She was diagnosed with a mental illness.
According to her medical records, she told hospital staff that she'd been held hostage by Scientology members.
No-one from the Church of Scientology was available for interview. Their lawyer Stuart Gibson denies the allegations
STUART GIBSON, CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY LAWYER: No, look, Steven, that's a nonsense. She was at Dundas first of all of her own volition and at all times she was free to leave Dundas. And I might hold up for the camera a couple of photographs of the facility at Dundas, which if you can clearly see, you would hardly say that it's Fort Knox. People that are there can access and egress that facility easily. So that allegation is just an absolute nonsense.
STEVE CANNANE: Was she put in isolation?
STUART GIBSON: No, she wasn't put in isolation. I think that's a derogatory term. She was actually in a sick bay.
STEVE CANNANE: But Alice's brother Jack, suspicious of what was going on, recorded a phone conversation from Taiwan with a Scientology official in Sydney.
Lateline has been told that is the voice of Mei Tsu Lee, a former president of the Church of Scientology in Taiwan.
In the conversation, Ms Lee admits Alice Wu was placed in isolation.
MEI TSU LEE, FMR PRESIDENT, CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY, TAIWAN (voiceover translation): I was with her in the isolation room after she became unstable.
STEVE CANNANE: Mei Tsu Lee was unavailable for interview.
STUART GIBSON: Well, I don't know. You'd have to take that up with her. The fact is she was in a sick bay. There is no isolation and there's never been isolation and to use that term is a derogatory term and it was nothing of the case.
STEVE CANNANE: If isolation is a derogatory term, why is it that L Ron Hubbard said you need to put people in isolation when they have a psychotic break?
STUART GIBSON: No, that's not true.
STEVE CANNANE: I've got the statement. It is true. He says anyone who has a psychotic break needs to be placed in isolation.
STUART GIBSON: No, we categorically deny that.
STEVE CANNANE: Here's Scientology's official policy on what they call the Introspection RunDown, a procedure to deal with mental breakdowns written by their founder L Ron Hubbard.
Under the heading Isolation it says, "With someone in a psychotic break, it is necessarily to isolate the person for him to destimulate and to protect him and others from possible damage. While in isolation the person received the Introspection RunDown, done flawlessly on a shortsession basis, gradiently winning and gaining confidence. Between sessions the muzzled rule is in force. No-one speaks to the person or in his hearing."
Hubbard described this policy as a technical breakthrough which possibly ranks with the major discoveries of the 20th Century.
This policy was followed with tragic consequences in 1995. Lisa Macpherson, a young Scientologist in Florida, had a mental breakdown. Instead of seeking psychiatric treatment, the Church of Scientology put her in isolation in a hotel room. She died 17 days later.
The Church of Scientology is opposed to psychiatry, labelling it an "industry of death".
MALE VOICEOVER (footage from the film Psychiatry: An Industry of Death): In the past four decades, nearly twice as many Americans have died in government psychiatric hospitals than in all US wars since 1776.
STEVE CANNANE: The day before Lateline was due to interview Scientology's lawyer, this story took another turn.
The ABC's managing director, Mark Scott, received an email from Alice Wu where she denies she was held against her will or was treated badly or hurt herself trying to escape. The email says, "I do not give ABC, your reporter or any other media for that matter permission to publicise or use my unfortunate circumstances to your advantage or to vilify an organisation I freely support."
The statement is witnessed by Yu Lung Chen, a notary from this office in Taiwan. It's dated February 14, three days after Lateline put forward the allegations to the Church of Scientology.
Alice's father and cousin later went to the office where she signed the statement.
TERESA WU (voiceover translation): Ms Chen said some people took Alice in to sign the document.
STEVE CANNANE: The notary involved, Yu Lung Chen, was unavailable for comment.
Teresa Wu says the two people who brought Alice here were from the Church of Scientology. Alice Wu's father is outraged.
WU CHOW-SHEN, FATHER OF ALICE (voiceover translation): She has been unstable and she was not in a good state of mind. She didn't have good judgment and can't tell right from wrong. I don't think it was right for her to sign the document. It should be annulled.
STEVE CANNANE: Alice Wu's father says he found out about the statement when a Scientology representative contacted him by phone.
WU CHOW-SHEN (voiceover translation): I had no idea at the start. I heard about it later when their lawyer called me and said an Australian program will be on air. I just said, "I want to live a peaceful life and I don't want anything upsetting," and I hung up. I was ignored in the past and they only called me when a program was going to be aired in Australia.
STEVE CANNANE: Given Alice has been mentally frail, how do we know that the church hasn't lent on her to make this statement?
STUART GIBSON: Well, we don't know one way or the other, Steven. I mean, I'm only going on my instructions. You may put that, but on my instructions, that's just not the case.
STEVE CANNANE: In an email to Lateline, Scientology spokesperson Sei Broadhurst said, "Ms Wu has never been coerced or forced into anything by anyone from the church."
Steve Cannane, Lateline.
EMMA ALBERICI: And a spokesperson from the Australian Federal Police has told Lateline they have investigated Alice Wu's case but found there was insufficient evidence to support any charges in relation to people trafficking or breaches of the Migration Act.
Do you have a comment or a story idea? Get in touch with the Lateline team by clicking here.