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The Church of Scientology and Hollywood's Elite

MADELEINE BRAND, host:

This is DAY TO DAY. I'm Madeleine Brand.

Actor Tom Cruise has been a Scientologist for years, but only recently has he gone public with his religion. In June, Cruise appeared on NBC's "Today" show and lectured host Matt Lauer on one of the core beliefs of Scientology, the evils of psychiatry and psychiatric drugs.

(Excerpt from the "Today" show)

Mr. TOM CRUISE (Actor/Scientologist): Psychiatry is a pseudoscience.

Mr. MATT LAUER (Co-host, "Today"): But aren't there examples where it works?

Mr. CRUISE: Matt, Matt, Matt, Matt. You don't even--you're glib. If you start talking about chemical imbalance, you have to evaluate and read the research papers on how they came up with these theories, Matt. OK? That's what I've done.

BRAND: NPR's Kim Masters has been looking into the star's relationship with Scientology for an article that appears in the upcoming issue of Radar magazine.

And, Kim, welcome back to DAY TO DAY.

KIM MASTERS reporting:

Thank you.

BRAND: And, Kim, not many reporters take on the Church of Scientology. It's been known in the past for being quite litigious.

MASTERS: They have been quite hostile to media scrutiny in the past. They have now said that they're trying to be more welcoming to the press. They've taken several reporters on tours of their celebrity center here in Los Angeles. But they made it very clear that they don't like what I did because I interviewed quite a number of fallen-away Scientologists, and they feel that that just taints the journalism in the piece.

BRAND: Because they had an ax to grind.

MASTERS: Well, they did. They're hostile to the Church of Scientology, as--no one is arguing that point, and they feel that they are people who did not live up to the church's ethical standards and that what they're saying is false. Many of them, they allege, are paid to lie. I mean, it's a very negative thing, they feel, about these people who are speaking out about the church.

BRAND: And let's go back--tell us a little bit about what Scientology is and how it was founded.

MASTERS: Well, Scientology was created by L. Ron Hubbard. It's been around for some time now. It starts out as a self-help kind of thing where you talk about issues that are bothering you. And you are audited with an E-Meter, which is a sort of a lie detector-like device. And they are looking to remove the issues that are plaguing you. The Church of Scientology has attracted a lot of Hollywood people who are always looking for a way to have an edge and to conquer their insecurities and to clear whatever problems might be impeding them in their career.

BRAND: And now they have the world's biggest movie star, Tom Cruise. And, Kim, we've known for years that he's been a Scientologist, but it seems only recently that he's really come out as a Scientologist publicly. Why is that?

MASTERS: The fallen-away Scientologists say that as you move up the ranks of the church you become what they call an operating thetan. A thetan is a spirit. And the way it works--it's kind of complicated to explain, but 75 million years ago, according to the story that is told, there was an intergalactic warlord named Xenu who was faced with a serious overpopulation problem in the galaxy, and he gathered up these spirits and put them on planet Earth and then nuked them. And they then became these free-floating spirits who were brainwashed to forget what had happened to them. And again, the church disputes this version that is told by the fallen-away Scientologists, but this is their story. And these thetans, these spirits, have attached themselves either singularly or in clusters, to all of us, are the source of many of our problems. And it is the mission of Scientology to awaken and release these thetans so that we can move forward with our lives.

BRAND: And once you attain higher ranks, you have shed yourself of these thetans?

MASTERS: Well, that is one of the functions that--at the level that Tom Cruise said to be at, OT-VII. You are supposed to spend some time every day seeking out, auditing yourself to find these clusters of thetans and get them to move on. And as you do that, your obligations to the church simultaneously are said to have expanded at that point, and you are expected to, according to one of the Scientologists we talked to who had, again, fallen away--you are expected to report on what you have done to spread the word about Scientology.

BRAND: And how is Tom Cruise's public embracing of Scientology--how is this being received in Hollywood?

MASTERS: Well, I'll tell you; a lot of people in Hollywood feel that he has damaged himself. It hasn't been visible yet because "War of the Worlds" was his biggest opening ever. And many people in Hollywood do feel there's damage there and many people in Hollywood have gone to psychiatrists, have taken medications that are verboten in the Church of Scientology and it makes them quite uncomfortable.

BRAND: And do you think that this is something that he's worried about?

MASTERS: Well, no, actually. I mean, one of the things Scientology does, as was explained to us by the people who left, is that they avoid bad news, and it would be the job of people to keep Tom Cruise from taking in a lot of bad news. And that is what caused one of the former Scientologists that we interviewed to talk about this notion that the--a celebrity like Tom Cruise is living in what he described as "The Truman Show," that he has no idea that there's a whole world out there that's different from what he hears. And any criticism they just dismiss, if they even hear it, which they--I don't know how much of this Tom Cruise has even heard.

BRAND: NPR's Kim Masters. Her article, The Passion of Tom Cruise, is in the upcoming issue of Radar magazine. Thanks, Kim.

MASTERS: Thank you. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Kim Masters
Kim Masters covers the business of entertainment for NPR News. Her reports can be heard on NPR's award-winning Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Weekend Edition. She joined NPR in 2003.
Madeleine Brand
Madeleine Brand is the host of NPR’s newest and fastest-growing daily show, Day to Day. She conducts interviews with newsmakers (Iraqi politicians, US senators), entertainment figures (Bernardo Bertolluci, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Ricky Gervais), and the everyday people affected by the news (an autoworker laid off at GM, a mother whose son was killed in Iraq).