Sounds Like A Cult - The Cult of Hollywood
Episode Date: July 16, 2024From TV executives abusing kids on sets to Scientology's "Celebrity Center," the cult of the entertainment business can getcha from about 6,000 different angles. After all, what other mainstream Ameri...can industry is glamorized and lusted-after to this extreme degree, only to betray its most successful acolytes with financial and physical exploitation, social isolation, dehumanization, and a destroyed sense of self-worth to the point that entertainers dying early tragic deaths of despair is not only accepted, it's practically a meme??? This week, host Amanda offers a lil history lesson on the cult of Hollywood before getting into some juicy personal stories and an analytical discush with the one and only Maria Bamford, iconic comedian and author of Sure, I'll Join Your Cult: A Memoir of Mental Illness and the Quest to Belong Anywhere. Who are Hollywood's true "cult leaders," and do their worst behaviors earn it the title of a GTFO-level cult? Tune in to find out!!! Follow us on IG @soundslikeacultpod @amanda_montell To order Amanda's new book, The Age of Magical Overthinking: Notes on Modern Irrationality, click here. To subscribe to Amanda's new Magical Overthinkers podcast and/or watch full episodes on YouTube, click here :) Thank you to our sponsors, who make this show possible: Go to stopscooping.com/SLAC and enter promocode SLAC to save an EXTRA $50 on any Litter-Robot bundle.  Head to Squarespace.com for a free trial, and when you’re ready to launch, go to https://www.squarespace.com/CULT to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain. Earn points by paying rent right now when you go to joinbilt.com/cult.
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KS That idea of fame in whatever venue that you're going to reach this enlightenment,
you are going to be beyond reproach, completely lovable. That never comes. As we all know, anyone who has an
internet presence, there's always at least 300,000 people who are not on
board. Or a billion people who don't care. So yeah, it's this weird
mythical promise that isn't real. That cycle of, do you love me?
Do you hate me?
Do you love me?
Do you hate me?
That's so addictive.
Yes.
This is Sounds Like a Cult, a show about the modern day cults
we all follow.
I'm your host, Amanda Montell, author of the books Cultish,
The Language of Fanaticism, and The Age of Magical Overthinking. Every week on the show, you're gonna hear us
analyze a different cult-like group from the zeitgeist, from Starbucks to
Jam Bands, to try and answer the big question, this group sounds like a cult,
but is it really?
And if so, which of our cult categories does it fall into? A live your life?
A watch your back?
Or a get the fuck out level cult?
After all, we are living in what I believe to be truly the cultiest era of all time,
with the goops and the corporate environments where you call your coworkers
a family but they would fire you tomorrow. We are seeking belonging and connection and
identity in so many fringy places these days, but not all cultishness is equally bad. It
truly falls on a spectrum, but I don't think anybody would dispute calling today's topic of discussion a cult. It's the cult of Hollywood.
Which is a spectrum in and of itself. I mean, on one end, you have this sort of innocuous aspirants
hoping to achieve Tom Cruise-level fame, which is essentially the equivalent of spiritual
enlightenment in this society,
all the way to overlap with legitimately terrifying groups like Scientology and the Mansons and
figures like Harvey Weinstein. There is always something newly culty happening in Hollywood,
literally always. The latest spotlight on it at the time of this recording has to do with news
that's come out about sexual predators on the sets of
children's TV shows. And because of how rare it is to get a job in Hollywood combined with how
hierarchical and patriarchal the sets are, men at the top can be very hard to question. And the fact
that this sort of thing happens in an industry whose reputation is not like, I don't know, Wall
Street or Silicon
Valley, one of these industries that is inherently sort of sinister seeming. Instead, Hollywood
seems fabulous and creative, and it appeals to the dreams of little kids as soon as they're
old enough to watch TV and movies. Hollywood is pernicious for so many reasons. There is so much mysticism and snakeyness and outright
evil to be found in the cult of Hollywood. And I would know because I've
lived in Los Angeles for over 10 years now just waiting to do this episode for
years and years. But also just that I live here and there's something about
the glitz and dreaminess and even the delusion of Hollywood that keeps me here.
I mean, that song, The Hotel California by the Eagles, is so accurate. You check
into this town and once you've caught the bug, it kind of becomes really hard to
check out. And if that's not culty, I don't know what is. When I first moved to LA
when I was 22, not to become an actress, not to succeed in entertainment,
but for other culty purposes, I was following a bad boyfriend out here. I really fell in
love with this Frank Lloyd Wright quote that kind of sums up the culture and mentality
here. He said, tip the world over on its side and everything loose will land in Los Angeles.
And I like that quote because the word loose
could mean any number of things.
Someone could be loose because they feel disconnected
from where they're from.
They're seeking something bigger or better
or just different when they come to LA.
Loose could mean willing to give up anything
in pursuit of fame.
Loose could mean lost.
Or loose could mean free, liberated,
open to new experiences, open to the possibility of larger-than-life opportunity. I'm really,
really excited for you to hear my interview with my guest host today because she knows the cult of
Hollywood in her bones. I was so honored that she was open to joining me today.
Get ready to feel charmed as fuck.
By the end of this episode, you're gonna be in her cult.
My special guest host today is the iconic comedian,
Maria Bamford, who published a memoir last year,
appropriately called, Sure I'll Join Your Cult,
in which she has a whole section where she writes about
the cult of fame and the effect of the entertainment industry
on her and her mental health and her view of the world.
But before we get into the interview, I want to talk about some of the history of the cult
of Hollywood and how that connects to the cult that it's become because it really
is absolutely fascinating.
There's an amazing book that talks about some of this subject matter called Fantasyland
by Kurt Anderson.
And in that book, the author writes about how the history of the Gold Rush actually
directly connects to the origin story of Hollywood.
They were either gold crazed adventurers seeking riches or fringy cult followers seeking
transcendence.
I learned in a really fascinating piece titled How California's Gold Rush Forged the Path for
Today's Tech Innovators by David Wagner how the gold rush really set the scene
for Hollywood types approach to success and failure. Wagner explained those early
California miners looked at success and failure differently than society had
before.
One prospector reached into a stream and pulled out a precious gold nugget. Another reached
into the same stream and pulled out a worthless rock. The one who failed to get rich saw the
other's success as little more than luck. That attitude toward risk is probably more
distinctive in California than just about anywhere else in the United States.
I've found that observation of Wagner's to be absolutely true.
There's so much talk in Hollywood about being in the right place at the right time,
having the perfect set of qualities matched up to the perfect audition or the perfect networking event.
Some people who are super talented show up to the stream of
that networking event and get out of it with nothing but a pebble, and then others just so happen to lock eyes with the right person and come out with
a gold nugget in the form of a TV pilot.
But The Gold Rush is actually more directly connected to the entertainment industry putting
down its roots in LA.
Another great piece titled Long Before Hollywood, The Gold Rush Drew Starlets to
California went on to explain that there came a demand for entertainment in those prospecting
towns where people were looking for gold. I think a lot of us have probably seen those old Hollywood
movies of like crude ragtag traveling bands and fiddle players and prize fighters and gamblers who would gather in saloons
or brothels and dance halls. But over time as people gained more wealth their
standards for entertainment got more bougie. They didn't want to just like
hang out in brothels all day anymore. So then we saw the emergence of theaters
and palladiums and jewel-sized playhouses and California started to
become known for these things.
So by the late 19th and early 20th centuries, talent from all over the world flooded into
Southern California.
Fast forwarding in history a little bit, Anderson's book Fantasyland talks about how once movies
became more prevalent in the early 1900s, fantasy itself became more prevalent. Fictions were being
invited into the lives of more and more and more people. So there was an explosion in advertising
and modern celebrity culture. In less than a hundred years, we would have our first celebrity
president in the form of Ronald Reagan. The cult of celebrity really does have a hold on all of us, the entire country.
That writer Wagner argued, now this gold rush mentality runs through California's history and
helped establish an entertainment industry in Hollywood that today contributes $90 billion
dollars in annual economic output to Los Angeles County. That stat is according to a 2017 Otis report on the creative economy.
It's undoubtedly much more now. So already we're talking about riches, fame, transcendence,
stardom, delusion. It's the perfect recipe for a cult. And I really have in my 10 years
here just even brushing up against the outskirts of Hollywood scene.
This cult have a really corrupting effect on people who come here with a dream that's
innocent enough, although maybe a little bit out of touch with reality, get a whiff of
the cult of celebrity by attending a party where a movie star was in attendance, or even just having a video on YouTube
that they made collaborating with other people that they met here in LA go viral. Once you get
that taste of what Hollywood has to offer, it can really take over your identity, your morality.
It's so interesting how so many followers of the cult of Hollywood, you know, these people who
are aspiring to succeed in entertainment actually low key want to rise up and become leaders
themselves, you know, like develop a cult following of their own. That's not true in every cult-like
corner of society. But I think in Hollywood, that gold rush rooted sense of competition
just sets everyone up to want to start their own little cult. But let's talk more specifically about some of the cultish aspects of Hollywood.
In an interview with The Guardian, John Cusack summed it up pretty well in this funny quote.
He said,
LA seems to be a place where a guy can say he's a life coach, channeler, masseur.
It just seems to be ripe with all these frontier crazies.
People are looking to turn their pain into beautiful art, but they also want to be famous. And there's so much money. So of course,
all the predators come in. It's true, there are like these beautiful aspects of it. We
just want to make something that will bring other people joy and meaning. Everybody has
a dream here. And I love that. But at the same time, in my view, nothing makes you more vulnerable to cultish influence
than that sense of optimism.
And there is so much fucking optimism here.
I mean, if you live in a place where nobody will indulge you when you tell them like,
oh yeah, I'm a model DJ, even though you have like no experience or nothing to actually
support that you're a model DJ, then eventually you'll be like, okay, nevermind, I'm gonna ground myself back to earth.
Or you'll move to LA where everybody is like that
and everybody will indulge you.
And that disconnectedness from reality
can cause people to behave in some truly upsetting ways.
It can cause them to give up their entire identity.
I learned in an article from The Guardian titled
Moguls and Starlets, 100 Years of Hollywood's Corrosive Systemic Sexism by Pamela Hutchinson
that, quote, in the 1930s, it was standard form for starlets to be made over by studio bosses with
their name, appearance, and ethnic identity altered. Here are some examples. Have you heard the name Margarita Cancino? Probably not. Have you heard the name Rita Hayworth? That's the
same person. Margarita became Rita Hayworth after she dyed her hair and
went through a procedure to fix her hairline. Same with Joan Crawford. That's
not her real name. Her real name was Lucille Lassour, but an MGM publicist
told her to change it after
telling her that her name reminded him of a sewer.
All it takes is a Hollywood exec to bless you with their attention for you to be like,
yeah, I'll be whoever you want me to be.
Is that not cult behavior?
This Guardian piece went on to say, quote, given a new name and image, a morality clause
to conform to and publicity stun stunts including staged romances
and studio stablemates, the star's persona began
and ended with the inventions of the front office.
The star was a creation of the executive's imagination
and his corporate asset to be discarded as soon
as she was tagged box office poison.
Even if you are like a super, super, super star
in Hollywood, you're like barely human to so many of the
people whose success rides on you. You are a commodity. And that's true to both executives
and your fans. I've, you know, communed with a celebrity or two after all these years in
Hollywood. And let me tell you, I've not met a single one who isn't anxious about their
level of fame.
Like it could go away tomorrow. They put so much effort in every single day to maintain it,
to make sure that they're beautiful enough, relevant enough, towing the company line,
so to speak. And what I find to be frustrating and culty about that is that while celebrities
are the subject of both public veneration and hatred hyper-exposed
to all these brutal fan dynamics and the rest, the executives pulling the strings just get to be rich,
powerful, and if they want to be, largely, invisible. Hollywood executives have been known to be,
oh god, verbally abusive, imply that performers would be nothing without them. And I
think where it becomes truly a cult leader situation is when they can get
away with all of this under the guise of being this sort of behind-the-scenes
genius mastermind who is mistreating you because they're all-knowing and they
know what's best for you and you are special. That's why you get to be abused.
Personally, executives drive me nuts.
So often they have these God complexes
and they're not based on genuine creativity or vision,
but just the fact that, you know,
they got promoted to the role of agent or exec.
They are often profoundly unoriginal human beings,
like Keith Raniere stealing his whole idea
for NXIVM from L. Ron Hubbard.
Actually, part of me thinks that Hollywood power abusers
are in a way jealous of the entertainers
that they have power over
because no matter how rich and powerful you are,
there is still nothing like the allure of talent
and celebrity.
That stuff is so easy to fall for, I've fallen for it.
There are so many mini cults in
Hollywood surrounding charismatic actors or directors who've ascended the
hierarchy and now sort of surround themselves with all of these cult
follower-esque groupies. Some celebrities have reputations for surrounding
themselves with cult follower types, for sure. Ehh, I don't know if I should name names, broop.
Anyways, more to the point,
I mentioned L. Ron Hubbard a moment ago.
Speaking of Scientology, as another cultish element here,
we can't not mention the overlap
between Hollywood and Scientology.
NPR's Kim Masters has pointed out that, quote,
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.
I learned while writing my book Cultish, in which there's like the whole section on
Scientology that Scientology like specifically preys on actors.
That's why there are so many famous Scientologists like Tom Cruise is the most famous one,
but also so many others that you would never guess because they don't make it super public like Elizabeth Moss.
Beck was once a Scientologist. One that I think is interesting is that the SNL cast member Chloe
Feynman is suspected to be a second generation Scientologist.
So like she was born into it, allegedly, allegedly.
Famous Scientologists are everywhere and there are many reasons for that.
But one of them is that one of Scientology's recruitment tactics is to set up these like
artist workshops that they will present as networking opportunities for aspiring actors
when really they're just
trying to get them to join the cult.
Allegedly, allegedly, allegedly, allegedly, allegedly, allegedly.
Scientology has a whole celebrity center and they rank their famous members higher than
others so that they might not have to follow certain rules that the plebes would have to
follow.
A piece from the publication in these times titled titled Why So Many Celebrities Are Scientologists, says,
It's no wonder the film industry is loaded up with members of Scientology. Both are rapaciously
profit-seeking corporate structures. Both revolve around celebrity worship, both love
displays of rank and status, both foster rampant narcissism, both set up abusive hierarchies
that run on paranoia, with underlings badly treated
and badly paid but afraid to speak out about it, and both rely on an amalgam of neuroses,
fantasies, and magical thinking. John Travolta's not the only successful actor-scientologist to be
convinced that the process of going clear got him the roles he's auditioned for, meaning his stardom
is directly reliant on Scientology, the way some other superstitious
actors might attribute success to a favorable moon.
They're referencing astrology there."
That quote mentioned how hierarchical Scientology is.
And I think that Hollywood types are actually well positioned to buy into that structure
because that's how the entertainment industry is. Think about it, in Hollywood there are even well-known labels for tiers of fame. A-listers, B-listers,
C-listers, D-listers. Everyone's constantly trying to beg, borrow, steal, clout, chase
in order to level up no matter who's fucked over in the process. Meanwhile, the hierarchy
actually goes on forever because who in Hollywood is ever truly satisfied
with their level of success?
You can't just chill.
Then of course the irony there is that
if you actually get to the highest level,
that A-list level of success,
when you're surrounded by all these admirers,
that's actually profoundly lonely.
It's this incredible con
and ultimately why people end up in the 27 club, you know,
young, talented, miserable, dying a death of despair, like from a drug overdose or an
eating disorder or some combination.
We've heard these tragic culty stories over and over, but it's hard to think rationally
when you've even stepped a toe in the door of Hollywood, celebrity is one of the
most powerful cultish forces in modern society. I will tell you, living here for 10 years, I've
had the opportunity to have a couple of Hollywood-y experiences. There's something about being in those spaces that just makes you forget yourself. You're like, I am in a holy place.
I have been blessed by this famous person, the things I would do to continue bathing in their
light. And if you're not careful, again, it can be very corrupting. You really have to take a step
back, which the industry actually makes it really hard to do. Psychologically, It tries to convince you that it's the only thing that matters in the whole
entire world and that if you're not willing to sacrifice everything to succeed
in Hollywood, then there is something wrong with you.
The Hollywood dogma is that if you don't want to be in this in-group, then you're
either pathetic or lying to yourself genuinely. Like that is the vibe.
I once had an executive try to convince me
to choose this Hollywoody type project
over something having to do with my book.
I remember him saying something to me along the lines
of that other book related project you wanna do
will never make you rich.
Which I could not believe what I was hearing.
It was like something out of the mouth of a villain
in a TV show about the entertainment
industry. Fortunately, I was like, you know, nice try buddy. No one gets into writing linguistics
books because they care about being rich. And that is the thing. I think one of the only ways to
protect yourself from truly slipping and falling into an everyday kind of cult to take its power away is to
honor when you sense some bullshit and not give your entire self to it. To always kind of have
a toe or even a foot out the door. You know that a group is too culty for comfort when they don't
let you have a whole entire foot out the door. But let's say you really can't take a step
back. Let's say your professional success and your sense of self-worth is really wrapped up in your
Hollywood connections. That can lead to the worst-case scenarios of the cult of Hollywood,
one of which is, of course, the story of Harvey Weinstein, which led to the Me Too movement.
The latest as of the time of this recording
is that egregious villain sex abuser,
Harvey Weinstein's convictions
were actually overturned recently.
Because as I understand it, and I'm no expert here,
the court actually allowed too many of his victims
to tell their story.
Make it make sense.
As of the time of this recording,
the latest that I'm aware of is that he will be retried. I'm sure there will be
updates in the future, but good God, the patriarchy works overtime. The atrocities committed by
Harvey Weinstein were disgusting and devastating, but he was certainly not the first, nor will
he be the last. A detail that some forget about the Harvey Weinstein case
is that Rose McGowan, the actress who was a victim of Harvey Weinstein and one of the
key very brave mouthpieces for that whole case and for his conviction, she was actually
raised in a real legitimate 70s era cult, The Children of God, which is sometimes known crudely as
a sex cult. And it's so sad and fucked up that she basically got out of that environment,
but it was like out of the frying pan and into the fire because then she entered the
cult of Hollywood, which again, at its worst is just as bad. Rose McGowan said that LA is, and I quote,
a town really built on sickness. Very early on, I looked at the power structure, the figureheads,
the silence, the closed ranks. Nobody tells it operates like a cult. I don't know if anyone here
listens to the Trust Me podcast hosted by Lola and Megan. I did an appearance on that podcast once. It's great. It talks about
cults and is hosted by two survivors who are also entertainers and live in Hollywood. I ran into
Lola at my local coffee shop not long ago, shout out. And she also described this phenomenon,
this overlap between the behavior of more, you know, quote unquote classic cults like the Children
of God or the Manson family or the Way International or something like that.
And Hollywood, they said, there are so many ways that we justify to ourselves the pain
that we've experienced in Hollywood and don't want to believe it and try to push it away.
And I think that is something that happens within cultic groups all the time.
One of the many dynamics is that you don't want to believe that people are bad.
You just don't.
It's hard.
And you don't want to believe that you're a victim. At least I didn't want to believe that people are bad. You just don't. It's hard. And you don't want to believe that you're a victim.
At least I didn't want to believe that I was a victim.
I'm like, no, I'm not the kind of person
that this stuff happens to anymore.
This doesn't happen to me.
So therefore, this was fun.
I had fun.
That was fun.
So this is me talking through
just some of the cultish aspects of Hollywood.
Obviously, I didn't even get into the details
of the sort of catch-22 of joining guilds and unions and the exploitation that led to
the writer strikes and actor strikes that we saw over last summer. Overall, in Hollywood,
there is just this incredible dehumanization that happens. Whether you're uplifting a celebrity to the status of a god
or downgrading them to the status
of like a replaceable piece of trash.
And yet the glitz and glamor is so alluring
that I could sit here making a whole podcast
about why Hollywood is so corrosive and sinister.
And yet you don't see me moving.
Also because moving is expensive.
But there really is something special about the cult of Hollywood that keeps me, if not
in, then adjacent next to dipping a finger into the champagne every now and again.
But before things get too depressing, I want to welcome on Maria Bamford because she is
so adorable.
And even after all these years roughing it in Hollywood, she has such a chillness to
her, such a self-awareness that I really appreciate and was a great sort
of like counter perspective to me. Maria grew up in Minnesota and had very much
that sort of small-town gal moves to the City of Angels story. She came to
Hollywood in her 20s, in the 90s to act and do comedy. So thanks for listening to
me go on this diatribe about the Cult of Hollywood.
And without further ado, please welcome the legendary comedian and writer, Maria Bamford.
Oh my gosh, Maria, thank you so much for joining me on this episode of Sounds Like a Cult. What a
splendid time already. Thank you. Thank you for having me.
Could you introduce yourself to our listeners
and tell us a little bit about your book?
My name is Maria Bamford.
I'm a comedian and I wrote a book and it just came
about that I started getting the theme of you're in a group as a family,
which is a cult, like your family always has very strong philosophies.
That once I left
the home was like, not everybody's adhering to these principles. And so then just kind
of went along with different things because I always have liked to have a strong point
of view. I love a dogma, listed tasks that you must do otherwise you're forsaken. I
enjoy anything like that at first.
And then of course I pick it apart and I stay, but resentfully.
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Okay. So I want to talk more about your book because your book is divided into these three
very clever sections, cult of family, cult of fame, cult of mental health care.
I wish we could dive deep into all of these topics today,
but instead we're just gonna focus on the second one,
the cult of fame.
So when I say the cult of Hollywood,
what does that mean to you?
I mean, it's kind of like what we're doing on our podcast.
It's like assigning one person's voice over another,
like, well, I'm being interviewed.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I love attention.
There's a reason I got into show business is because it's very hot and cold.
Sometimes you're the best and you're amazing and you're a genius.
That hot and cold dynamic has felt very comfortable to me.
And now, as I get older, I hope it's less interesting.
I certainly think that idea of fame in whatever venue
that you're going to reach this enlightenment,
you are going to be beyond reproach, completely lovable.
That never comes.
As we all know, anyone who has an internet presence,
there's always at least 300,000 people who are not on board.
Or a billion people who don't care.
So yeah, it's this weird mythical promise that isn't real.
I love how you mentioned the billion people who don't care because that cycle of, do
you love me?
Do you hate me? Do you hate me? Do you love me?
Do you hate me?
Is all still attention and that's so addictive.
It's like the hot and cold thing.
This is the cult of wellness in Los Angeles,
but I sometimes do hot cold therapy
and like a sauna cold plunge.
And there's something like addictive
about the pain and pleasure of that.
And it kind of reminded me of what you were saying
in a more abstract way. That's an element in Hollywood. So on this podcast, we discuss a lot of cults where
I don't understand the appeal at all, like Tony Robbins or Wall Street, these groups that are just
simply not for me. But I think Hollywood is one where anyone can wrap their head around the allure of this group.
How were you lured into the cult of Hollywood to begin with? What was that story and what qualities
in you do you think made Hollywood's magic work on you? It's exciting. You don't know what's going
to happen next. Like I don't know whether I'll get a job or lose a job today. Like, it's just, you have no idea.
And the fantasy element of it,
and the idea of being recognized felt like some sort of power.
Like, as a kid, I was very depressed,
and I was introverted.
And so I think that I got elation from being onstage.
I felt relief, like what you were saying, you know, relief from your brain when on stage.
And so it's also a parasocial relationship with the audience.
So it's not a real friendship, but it can feel very safe.
It's not a real relationship where I can disappoint people or they can disappoint me.
Right.
Just being amplified.
Like our conversation right now, I'm
very safe. I feel very comfortable in a podcasting situation. Any kind of thing where I'm being
recorded, there's something about that that's very like, well, nothing bad will happen. Or if it does,
it's on record. There is some controlled environment element to it.
That's fascinating.
And I haven't thought of it this way before, but perhaps like always being
perceived and always being recorded and always having your words and actions
witnessed is maybe a bid at cheating death, which is a very cultish pursuit,
right?
Like this is sort of an attempt at immortality in a way.
Yeah, which is ridiculous because I'm gonna die.
Okay, but like when you moved to Hollywood,
what made you certain?
Like, I don't wanna just perform down at Lake Superior.
I wanna do the damn thing.
I mean, I have bipolar too,
so I think probably in a hypomanic state.
At the time, I really believed in a God,
and I definitely did not believe in that,
but kind of felt like,
oh, I'm supposed to go, you know, like I had had a job and they said if I moved to LA,
I could work more and it seemed like it was meant to be. And that was really hilarious.
In retrospect, when I came to Los Angeles and I just really fell into a hole, you know,
because I think the reality of life, I didn't
know how to have a job.
I didn't realize that, oh, it's a massive city and people are going to be extremely
skilled and or confident who come here.
I'm not necessarily going to get work at all.
And yeah, I just had a number of things that I just didn't plan on.
And I definitely had to learn how to better take care
of myself and that got me into different other groups. I got into debtors anonymous. Somebody
told me because I couldn't pay my rent at all. I got mugged and robbed and my landlord accepted
sex for rent. I just didn't know where to go. My mom said, well, you should come home. And I was
like, I don't like them. And so I started attending this group. It's a 12 step program for money.
There's another one called Under Earners Anonymous.
People attend and all these programs are available online
if you're ever interested.
They're a little weird pseudo spiritual language,
paternalistic counseling, peer peers, you know,
not for everybody, but it did help me like kind of get some
footing of like support around how to be willing to have a job to take care of myself,
which sadly, I am never willing to work.
I'm always like, what? An object at rest?
I am within the myth of Sisyphus, I am the rock.
I never want to do anything.
I think that's a character flaw, sadly. And also I have a fear of not doing things right. So
it really helped to have this cult and whether that had been, I mean, had I gone to a church
or had Scientology and I did actually go into Scientology. I took that crazy quiz.
Me too.
I took it too.
The quiz really, like, I was just like, this is nonsense.
1000%.
Did you go further into it?
Because I never did that.
OK, yeah.
I went to the first thing and I was like, huh.
It also cost so much money.
And that's the good thing is about 12-step is that it's free.
So that's one thing that makes it lightly safer, I want to say to myself.
It is fascinating.
I do not know a single entertainment professional who is not a member of some other arm of cultishness,
whether it's 12-step programs or Scientology or some like woo woo wellness circle,
because it's the dreamer aspect.
You move with a pie in the sky dream,
and then you show up and it's not what you thought
it would be, but you still don't wanna give up
because of sunk cost fallacy and the rest.
And so that makes you perfectly positioned
to get swept up into another group.
That's gonna promise to help you even more.
That's the problem with any group is like,
of course some people, all the dreams
will come true. Whatever the 1%, the half 1% of the dreams will come true. And then the 75% will be
like, what the fuck? You know, I kind of want to talk about the power structure of Hollywood. Who
are these quote unquote cult leaders? Like, is it studio executives, directors, actors, who are the followers? How is power distributed in Hollywood?
One thing I learned about people who are really famous,
and Reese Prigge, the first five I met,
who is really famous or really powerful,
they really care about it.
Like, they are 24-7 into it.
They're working their asses off to make that happen.
It's not a fluke, but I might be the wrong person to ask
because I'm not somebody who is ambitious.
I'm not somebody who is knocking on the door of whatever it is going,
hey, can I have this?
Because I'm done.
I don't, I really genuinely, financially, I could retire
in the middle of the sentence
and move to Utah and why don't I?
That's the question.
Why don't I?
At this point, why don't you move to Utah?
I'm asking for a breath.
Utah is kind of boring.
I do love creating stuff.
I do still love the attention value.
I love the bird watching aspect of show business
where it's like, huh, I got to see,
I got to see Ziwei.
You know what I got to see.
I know, I like it too.
You know, it's like, it's fun.
And people who are at the top of their game
and or at the top of their confidence level,
like I love an extremely confident show business person.
It is delightful to watch.
Me too.
So I like that and I like creating.
I think LA is a very safe space to create stuff.
New York or Chicago is a bit tougher,
so people will just go,
you fucking suck and you can't make people love, whatever.
Ellie is like, you're amazing.
You did a great job.
Now, you will never see those people again, probably,
because they live in Marie Anteleure.
But it's very positive atmosphere.
I really love that.
And I just, I feel like, yeah, like, people are happier
when they're making something. And whether that means I'm I feel like yeah like people are happier when they're
making something and whether that means I'm I'm interested in other stuff like
I'm hoping to become a part of the solution by being a suicide hotline
answerer. I did that for a year at Trevor, Trevor project. Oh my god how was it? I think
do yeah doing something like that
is a great antidote to getting outside of yourself
in a town that encourages you to be so self-focused.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, so in your book, you call the entertainment business
a money laundering scheme, and I was wondering
if you could explain what you mean by that
and how Hollywood is fiscally very culty and exploitative.
I mean, that was about a particular experience.
Like sometimes the award shows,
they had this strange comedy award show,
and I was like, I've never heard of this thing in my life.
And it seemed like it was funded by something,
I don't know where it was,
but there's all these famous comedians there.
And I was like, what is going on?
It was like in its second year.
I was like, yeah, that clearly some kind of money laundry,
because nobody's making any money off that.
And I've worked at clubs where it
seems like comedy is probably not what's going on.
Not what's going on.
Yeah, or they're not as concerned about the arts
portion of it.
Although, I don't know if night clubbing is supposed
to be about entertainment.
You know, it's about like getting people to drink
and you know, it's this 7,000% upsell on chicken tenders.
Like that's the real star of the show.
When I did a show on Netflix,
I tried to get more info on why it was
that they didn't want to give me a 12 hour turnaround.
Like what were the budgetary factors?
Is it an equipment rental? Are we taking too many takes on each take? Like, what is the deal? And
I just couldn't seem to... It's like, with such a massive machine and I was exhausted
that I couldn't seem to get any answers about like, oh, well, it's this line item. The cameras
cost a million dollars a day. And, you know, like it was very mystical.
Right. Yeah.
There's so much like smoke and mirrors going on
in general with Hollywood.
Like I think about speaking of award shows,
how there are like secret campaigns for nominees
that go on leading up to an award show
to get so-and-so an award
because you want to use them as a pawn in this other deal.
And then the audience only sees the movie magic outside version of that.
And so yeah, I find that they're just like a lot of secrets and it's hard to know who has the bird's-eye view or the
God's-eye view. Who really knows what's going on?
I think it's very much like a dysfunctional family where nobody knows what's going on.
And what I try to do is work on an individual level saying,
okay, well, when I pay people, they know what my costs are
and why I'm paying the amount that I'm paying them
so that they have room to negotiate
if they want to negotiate for me.
And comedians are very much non-union.
So let's say you blow up on TikTok.
You're selling out a stadium.
You're getting $100,000 a show, but you have an opening act.
Well, do you tell your opening act
that you're making $100,000 a show?
Or do you even have an opening act?
Because usually openers, this is 35 years ago,
they used to pay openers maybe $150 a show.
It is still that much. It is still $150 a show. It is still that much.
It is still $150 a show.
Wait, why?
Because no one's demanding otherwise.
Yeah, unless you speak up for yourself,
that's what the clubs, that's what it seems like,
at least my friends who I know open for people.
You're lucky to open for somebody, whatever.
I think the great thing about it is that you
can individually empower yourself,
you know, like you're never saying no without a number, you know, to go, I'm going to put this
number out. I do have a lawyer instead of walking away from something going, well, see if we can
agree on a number. And then sometimes it doesn't work out. Sometimes it's okay if it doesn't work
out. You kind of touched on this, but Hollywood is one of those extremely glamorous industries
where you can exploit people for the opportunity or the exposure.
And yet I didn't realize this until recently, but like truly everything is negotiable.
And if an opportunity goes away, maybe it was meant to like maybe that sounds woo woo,
but like I believe that.
And even if you're just happy for the rest of that day
because you didn't have to take that job.
And I don't think Collingwood is at all special
in terms of jobs.
Like jobs, people, you have to negotiate.
And there's all these weird guilt trips
that people put you on, you know,
whether you're an accountant, like,
well, we're just, we're not doing well this year.
Especially the lower you get paid in our country, the harder it is to get a raise or a living wage.
It's absolutely disgusting, you know, that you're lucky to have a job, aren't you?
You're part of the family. Like there's all these emotional plays that people do that are negotiating techniques.
Right. So I do notice that there's a sort of ends justify the means attitude in Hollywood,
which we're kind of talking about now, that can coerce good people to behave sort of horribly.
And in the book, I love that you say that good performers and storytellers are really
just like crafty tricksters. And you compare show business to a drunk friend who's like
sometimes fun and glamorous,
but sometimes mean and crying and begging you for money.
And I was wondering if you could elaborate
on how the cult of Hollywood basically coerces people
into thinking that it's acceptable and in fact laudable
to over promise your capabilities or straight up lie
all in pursuit of this big dream.
I think it's the same thing that we all do
in social relationships.
You know, wanting people to like you,
putting a false front on is a natural human survival thing.
But you know, like any job, you also wanna keep your job.
I think, you know, when I've had health issues at work,
that's felt scary, like, oh,
I am not gonna be able to work anymore.
I am not seen as a viable product.
I have a bit of a tremor,
which people like to point out to me.
I love that.
And I tend to, you know,
not want it to be seen as unmarketable or weak or ill.
But I think that's every area of society.
Right, right.
It's in friendships. I mean, I don't know if you've ever had a friend in the hospital or
they got really sick and you're like, so I guess I probably shouldn't call them for three
months.
I mean, I've done that. Like instead of going to see them and embracing them, I've gone
as a kind of, I don't know what to say. Bye.
And so yeah, I don't think that special to in my opinion, but
Yeah, no, you're so right
It's just that maybe the audience for that deception in Hollywood is potentially like thousands
If not millions of people whereas the audience in a more private career is like your boss your co-workers
And so that maybe like pour some gasoline on the fire
What is would you say the cultiest experience you've ever had in Hollywood?
You talk about the book, like that I went to, it was, at the time it was called Life Springs,
and a friend of mine from work, I worked as a secretary for about 10 years in the studios,
and my girlfriend, she was like, you gotta come to Life Springs.
I was like, all right. And I went, it was at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel,
and these people shared these amazing stories of like,
I was in a terrible place and I was sad and lonely and abused.
Then now I'm filled with life and verve and look at me and my plaid jacket.
Then hundreds of other people got up and said,
I'm depressed, help me out.
Then they broke up after two hours of this into,
do you have 900 bucks?
Do you have 900 bucks to go on this weekend in wherever it was, a Best Western somewhere,
to talk about your potential.
And as I had no money and I was already in debtors and I was like, I can't put it on
a card and I can't borrow it from anybody because that's the whole thing.
I was already in a cult, couldn't get into the LifeSpring's cult.
So, and again, they have that very attractive idea of like,
oh, if you join us, you will achieve things.
And I am really not a fan of Tony Robbins.
Like I just, I feel like that's cruel.
He's physically frightening.
The fact that he's a white male
and yelling at people at the top of their
lungs, talking to them about their trauma, I just go, eh.
Oh no.
Yeah, I don't know. Or charging people five grand for something like where people put
themselves in debt. It's not my favorite. Not my favorite. Not that he's asking me.
I know. He's perfectly fine. Actually, I was abroad recently, I was in France, and I like overheard a conversation
between these two girls and I like inserted myself into it.
And I was like, how'd you ladies meet?
And they were French, they were like,
at the Tony Robbins conference, we love Tony Robbins.
I was like, I cannot with this man's world domination.
Okay, I wanna play a game.
This game is called culty quotes.
So what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna read a list of quotes.
These quotes were either said by a notorious cult leader from history or a Hollywood bigwig.
And you're going to have to guess who said the quote, a cult leader or a Hollywood exec. Okay?
The first quote is, rejection is a common occurrence. Learning that early and often
will help you build up the tolerance and resistance to keep going and keep trying.
I think that's a Hollywood icon.
It is. It's a Hollywood icon. It's Kevin Feig, the Marvel guy.
Oh, okay.
The head of Marvel.
Okay, alright. There you go.
Next quote.
I am a benevolent dictator.
That sounds like someone who would be Hollywood.
Yes.
That was indeed Harvey Weinstein.
Next quote, the riskiest thing we can do is just maintain the status quo.
I would say that's probably a political despot.
It was Bob Iger, the head of Disney.
Okay, alright, okay.
Identifying as a disruptor, which cult leaders often do.
Okay, no sense makes sense.
I'm gonna say dictator.
It was Charlie Manson.
Okay, great.
I mean, not great, but I did it.
Good job.
Yeah, also someone who desperately wanted to be in the cult of Hollywood. He wanted
to be a famous singer. I've been talking about Charles Manson for so long now that I'm on a
nickname basis with him. We call him Charlie now. Okay. Last quote. Without this flock,
I would be worthless. Without the people in this flock, I'd be empty. Without the people who started
this flock, I'd be dead. Wow. That's intense. But it is tweetable. I'm gonna say Hollywood.
I'm so glad that was your guess because it was actually Marshall Applewhite,
the leader of Heaven's Gate. Oh my gosh.
But it just goes to show how charisma in Hollywood and charisma in a niche, millenarian, suicide
cult atmosphere can sound similar when distilled to a neat and tidy aphorism.
Maria, thank you so much for playing this game, for participating in this cult that
is sounds like a cult.
And if folks want to keep up with your work, your totally balanced level of ambition, where can they find you?
Yeah, mariabamford.com. Google me, Maria plus comedian. That's where you'll find it.
Incredible.
Thank you for having me. Thank you.
Oh, a pleasure.
So, culties, I got to be honest with you. I was so sort of nervous and starstruck, literally
cult of Hollywood so meta, while interviewing Maria, that I full blown forgot to ask her
the final verdict.
The like most important question on Sounds Like a Cult.
If you are a new listener, at the end of each of our episodes, I pose the ultimate question
to my guest host of the week, which is if the cult of the week is a live your life, a watch your back,
or a get the fuck out level cult. I dropped the ball this week. I just, I plum forgot. So I'm just going to offer my opinion on which cult
category Hollywood falls into and I think it is a heavy heavy heavy watcher
back. I think at its core there's something very beautiful and magical about the art of cinema, but the sort of, ugh, yeah,
the fame, the fame stuff and the amount of money, ah, and the patriarchy and the power
dynamics, it always ruins it, you know?
Please, I need your help.
Which cult category do you all think the Cult of Hollywood falls into?
Please take to our Instagram, it sounds like a cult pod, and find our Cult of Hollywood
little post on there and comment which you think it falls into.
I need your help this week.
But that is our show.
Thank you so much for listening.
Stick around for a new cult next week.
And in the meantime, stay cult.
But not too culty.
Sounds Like a Cult is hosted and produced by Amanda Montell and edited by Jordan Moore of the Podcabin. Our theme music is by Casey Cold. This episode was made with production help from Katie
Epperson and Rhys Oliver. Thank you as well to our partner All Things Comedy. And if you like the show, please feel free to
check out my books, Word Slut, A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language,
Cultish, The Language of Fanaticism, and The Age of Magical Overthinking, Notes on Modern
Irrationality. If you're a fan of Sounds Like a Cult, I would really appreciate it if you
leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts.