tom cruise
-
A video of Tom Cruise promoting Scientology that's been popping around the web the past few days like a whack-a-mole. He sort of reminds me of his Magnolia character in this.
(4) # 1/15/2008
-
Paramount has agreed not to show the Scientology/Cruise episode of South Park again, after Cruise lodged a complaint. What's nearsighted about this article is that it presumes Cruise is upset about the "come out of the closet" aspect of the episode, when I'm pretty sure he's upset about the staid mockery of his chosen religion.
(6) # 1/20/2006
South Park takes on Scientology, Cruise

I got an email from my brother yesterday imploring me to watch the latest episode of South Park. I used to watch the show when it first started airing in 1997, but I've since stopped because the scripts tend to be unfunny and seemingly thrown together, with an offensive concept or two to bind the whole thing together. But my brother said this episode mocked Scientology and R. Kelly's "Trapped in the Closet" song-cycle, both of which have been the source of much of my amusement, so I had to watch.
And as I should've expected, the episode was for the most part boring and unfunny, relying heavily on the joke that Tom Cruise should come out of the closet (the one in Stan's room, not the metaphorical one). Yet, I'm glad I saw the episode nonetheless for its portrayal of Scientology. Rather than just mocking Battlefield Earth, they presented some basic tenets of Scientology virtually as they are. I say virtually because they got some facts wrong like overemphasizing the role thetans play for new inductees over engrams (thetans begin to play a much larger role after the state of clear is achieved).
But the best part of the episode is when the leader of Scientology gave Stan the origin tale of Scientology, something that most Scientologists do not learn until they've invested years and tens of thousands of dollars. The tale is something out of a sci-fi novel -- the evil alien overlord Xenu banishes a bunch of aliens to earth because his galaxy is overpopulated, and then blows them up with a nuclear bomb placed in a volcano -- but in the episode the story is recreated without a single joke, except that during the entire scene the text "This is really what Scientologists believe" is on-screen. So true. But to be fair, an animated recreation of Revelations or certain Mormon beliefs would seem as ridiculous.

Recent comments
Jon May
2 days 4 hours ago
crazymonk
2 days 5 hours ago
Jon May
2 days 5 hours ago
melinda
2 days 6 hours ago
leum
2 days 9 hours ago
RumorsDaily
3 days 1 hour ago
Jesse
3 days 1 hour ago
jbg.
3 days 6 hours ago
jbg.
3 days 6 hours ago
Jesse
3 days 18 hours ago