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EST and The Forum in popular culture

Werner Erhard and his courses have been referenced in popular culture in various forms of fictional media including literature, film, television and theatre. The original course, known as est, was delivered by the company Erhard Seminars Training (est). Under the name The Forum, they were delivered by Werner Erhard and Associates. Also, the Landmark Forum, a program created by Erhard's former employees after purchasing his intellectual property, has had an influence on popular culture. Some of these works have taken a comedic tack, parodying Erhard and satirizing the methodology used in these courses.

Leonard Maltin praised Burt Reynolds's charm in Semi-Tough, a film that parodied est.

Both est and The Forum have been depicted more often in film and television than in literary works. The 1977 film Semi-Tough satirized Erhard and the est Training, through the fictional "Bismark Earthwalk Action Training," in which Bert Convy portrayed a character said to have been a parody of Erhard. Diana Ross and Joel Schumacher, who had both taken the est training, incorporated Werner Erhard's teachings into the 1978 musical film, The Wiz. The 1990 film The Spirit of '76 also parodied est, with Rob Reiner portraying a trainer for the est-like "Be, Inc. Seminars." Movie critics have also drawn parallels to est and Werner Erhard, in reviews of the films Fight Club and Magnolia. Concepts from the Landmark Forum were utilized by The Wachowskis in their film The Matrix Revolutions. Werner Erhard's training programs have been parodied in television. The 1979 episode of Mork & Mindy, "Mork Goes Erk", and the 2002 episode of Six Feet Under, "The Plan", are the most notable. In the Mork & Mindy episode, the Erhard parody character was played by David Letterman.

Madison, Wisconsin's Broom Street Theater produced a play about Werner Erhard and The Forum in 1995, called Devil In Paradise, The Fall and Rise of Werner Erhard. This piece presented a fictionalized version of controversial issues surrounding Erhard.

The third and fourth season of the FX series The Americans contains a story line in which several recurring characters attend the est Training in or near Washington, DC. In a recreation of the est Training, the lead character and Russian spy, Phillip, begins to confront his past and to question his purpose.

Background Edit

The est Training was a two-weekend, 60-hour course offered from late 1971 to late 1984. The purpose of the seminar was "to transform one's ability to experience living so that the situations one had been trying to change or had been putting up with, clear up just in the process of life itself."[1] It "brought to the forefront the ideas of transformation, personal responsibility, accountability, and possibility."[2]

Music Edit

John Denver wrote the song "Looking for Space" which was dedicated to Erhard, and became a theme song for est.

R.E.M. briefly referenced the est Training in their song "Country Feedback."

Fiction Edit

est and successors in literature Edit

Depictions of est and The Forum in literature have dealt with direct references to these trainings, through such books as Werner Erhard, The Transformation of a Man, The Founding of est, by W.W. Bartley, III; 60 Hours that Transform Your Life, by Adelaide Bry; Getting It: The Psychology of est, by Sheridan Fenwick, est: Making Life Work, by Robert Hargrove; The est Experience by James Kettle; and The Book of est by Luke Rhinehart.

est was parodied in the March 1980 issue of the Marvel Comics Howard the Duck series, titled: "The Dreadcliff Cuckoos".[3] In "The Dreadcliff Cuckoos", the character "Werner Blowhard" heads the organization "Bozoes Eagerly Serving Tyrants", abbreviated B.E.S.T.[3] In his first appearance in the comic, Blowhard states "I've got It, Have you got It?".[3] The "Werner Blowhard" character was later referenced in D. Keith Mano's 1982 novel, Take Five.[4]

In Pressure Points, a 2001 novel by Larry Brooks, one of the book's protagonists asserts that the programs developed by Werner Erhard, William Penn Patrick, and Alexander Everett all came from the same source.[5] The Program, a 2004 novel by Hurwitz, quotes Erhard prior to the opening of the prologue.[6]

Film Edit

1970s Edit

 
est advocate Valerie Harper contacted Bert Convy on behalf of Werner Erhard during the filming of Semi-Tough.[7]

Werner Erhard and his est Training programs and later The Forum have been parodied in films, both directly and through more subtle references. Still in other films that did not directly intend to parody the subject matter, other reviewers have found elements of the est movement as applied to the genre of fictional self-help films. The 1977 movie Semi-Tough, starring Burt Reynolds, parodied the est training.[8] Bert Convy played "Friedrich Bismark," a caricature of Werner Erhard. Bismark's organization and its training went by the name "B.E.A.T.", which stands for: "Bismark Earthwalk Action Training." In real life, Erhard had a Mercedes Benz with a llicense plate that said "SO WUT", in the film, Bismark rode in a limousine that said: "BEAT IT". A form of Rolfing was also parodied in the film, and Lotte Lenya's character "Clara Pelf", called PELFING", was described as: "a Rolf like masseuse."[7] The press caught on to this satire of Erhard in the film, and gave these sections of the film positive reviews. The Wall Street Journal did not give an overall positive review, but did appreciate the portions where Werner Erhard was parodied: "The movie isn't much - an erratic ramble - But it has some pleasant moments, and a delicious send-up of The self-improvement guru Werner Erhard."[9] The Charlotte Observer praised Bert Convy's portrayal of the self-help guru Frederick Bismark, writing: "Bert Convy is a hilariously smug consciousness-raiser with a more than passing resemblance to est's Werner Erhard."[10] After the film's release, Bert Convy appeared on The Tonight Show and discussed his experiences when he attended an est training seminar in preparation for his role as Frederick Bismark. During actual filming on Semi-Tough, Convy received a late-night phone call from actress Valerie Harper, known in Hollywood as a devoted student of Werner Erhard. She related to Convy that Erhard was "pleased" with the role, and she wished him success in the film. However, Convy suspected that her real reason for calling was to subtly pressure him to go easy on his parody of Erhard in the film.[7] However, several EST graduates shunned the film for making fun of the training, its methods, its philosophy, as well as Werner Erhard, himself.

 
est student Diana Ross worked some of Werner Erhard's teachings into the film version of The Wiz.[7]

The Grove Book of Hollywood wrote that the 1978 film, The Wiz was influenced by Werner Erhard's teachings and est because actress Diana Ross and writer Joel Schumacher were "very enamored of Werner Erhard."[7] The film's producer Rob Cohen noted that: "before I knew it, the movie was becoming an est-ian fable full of est buzzwords about knowing who you are and sharing and all that. I hated the script a lot. But it was hard to argue with Diana because she was recognizing in this script all of this stuff that she had worked out in est seminars."[7] Schumacher spoke positively of the results of the est training, saying: "I will be eternally grateful for learning that I was responsible for my life."[7] Of est and Erhard references in the film itself, The Grove Book of Hollywood notes that the speech delivered by the Good Witch, played by actress Lena Horne, at the end of the film was "a litany of est-like platitudes," and the book also makes est comparisons to the song "Believe in Yourself."[7]

In the 1979 film Manhattan, Woody Allen's character Isaac Davis says of his first wife, "She was a kindergarten teacher, then she got into drugs and moved to San Francisco. She went to est, became a Moonie. She works for the William Morris Agency now.".

1980s Edit

Circle of Power, also known as Mystique, Brainwash and The Naked Weekend, is a 1981 film, co-produced by Gary Mehlman, Anthony Quinn and Jeffrey White, and based on the non-fiction book The Pit: A Group Encounter Defiled. It stars Yvette Mimieux in her final film performance.

1990s Edit

 
Rob Reiner portrayed "Dr. Cash", a parody of Werner Erhard, in the 1990 film The Spirit of '76.[11]

In the 1990 film The Spirit of '76, Rob Reiner plays "Dr. Hedley Cash" (referred to only as "Dr. Cash" in the film), an abusive trainer for the est-like "Be, Inc. Seminars" who traps time-traveler Heinz-57 (played by Geoff Hoyle) in one of his seminars and continually refers to him as "Heinz Asshole".[12] In the DVD commentary for the 2003 release of the film, director Lucas Reiner stated that the "Absentee, oblivious, self-involved parents who don't notice their kids have a spaceship" was a reference to the self-involved nature of adults during the 1970s and their propensity for self-improvement.[11] Reiner stated that these scenes were meant to symbolize the "'70s hunger for self-improvement" and the extreme ends that people would go to in order to improve themselves. Lucas Reiner had never personally attended one of Werner Erhard's seminars, but had heard that attendants were not allowed to leave, often peed in their pants, and were called "assholes" and insulted publicly. Reiner noted that once his brother Carl put on the "Dr. Cash" costume, he played his character perfectly.[11]

Heavyweights, a 1995 comedy film, portrays a fat camp for kids that is taken over by fitness guru Tony Perkis, played by Ben Stiller. In a review of the film in The Washington Post, Hal Hinson compared Stiller's portrayal of the Perkis character to Erhard, and called him "the Werner Erhard of slide aerobics".[13]

 
Fight Club author Chuck Palahniuk's work was influenced by his experiences in the Landmark Forum.[14]

Fight Club author Chuck Palahniuk was a graduate of The Landmark Forum, or "The Forum" for short, and this later influenced his work.[14][15][16] In his review of the 1999 film adaptation of the book, Roger Ebert likened the character Tyler Durden to Werner Erhard.[17] Ebert wrote that Tyler Durden was: "...a bully--Werner Erhard plus S & M, a leather club operator without the decor."[17] Fight Club film producer Ross Grayson Bell believes that his "creative synchronicity" with writer Palahniuk was due to their shared experience of attending The Forum.[14]

In the 1999 film Magnolia, Tom Cruise played a motivational guru named Frank T.J. Mackey, who was the author of a self-help book called Seduce and Destroy. This work was meant to teach men how to get women to sleep with them. The Frank T.J. Mackey character in the film has been likened to: "a sort of pop-TV blend of Werner Erhard and Bob Guccione, strutting around a stage with cocksure arrogance, indoctrinating his acolytes in the arts of machismo and seduction".[18] The Frank T.J. Mackey character has also been compared[by whom?] to another motivational trainer influenced by Erhard, in Details Magazine.[19]

2000–present Edit

 
The Wachowskis drew on their experiences in the Landmark Forum seminar series when they wrote The Matrix Revolutions.[20][21]

In her 2004 book Life Long Learning: Transforming, Learning Discovering Through Living Life in Unlimitless Possibilities, Lady Nenari Anne Diamond writes that filmmakers The Wachowskis got the inspiration for the screenplay to The Matrix Revolutions while participating in a Landmark Forum "seminar series."[20] Diamond also analyzes The Matrix Revolutions and the messages imparted in the film, in the context of her own personal experiences in the Landmark Forum. She describes a tautologous exchange between Agent Smith and Neo in the film, where Neo is asked by Smith: "Why do you continue to do this, Mr. Anderson?" and Neo responds: "Because I choose to." Diamond uses this example to explain the Landmark Forum's discussion of "choice and decision."[20] Diamond provides further analysis of other Landmark Forum concepts utilized in The Matrix Revolutions in her book Stepping Into Spiritual Oneness: Spiritual Rememberings of the Soul Through Life Experience, including the concept that: "we all choose to BE who we are being in each and every moment of our experience."[21]

Television Edit

Mork & Mindy Edit

 
David Letterman portrayed a parody of Werner Erhard in an episode of Mork & Mindy called "Mork Goes Erk."[22]

Parody and satire of est and The Forum in television has taken a more direct approach than in literature and film. Characters have been shown attending seminars, and having negative outcomes as a result. Mork & Mindy dealt with this in a lighter fashion, dealing with a small introduction of individuals to the training in a home environment, in season one, episode seventeen: "Mork Goes Erk."[23] In the episode, David Letterman portrayed an Erhard-like character by the name of "Ellsworth" offering ERK or Ellsworth Revitalization Konditioning.[22] In a 1982 article in the journal Theory & Society, Lewis & Clark College sociology professor Robert Goldman compared and contrasted Letterman's "Ellsworth" character and his training program to that of Werner Erhard. Goldman noted that the episode spent time: "lampooning Werner Erhard and est-like commercial pop psychologies." However, Goldman went on to note that the inherent problem with "Ellsworth Revitalization Konditioning" was not the training - but Ellsworth himself. Ellsworth is seen not just as a parody of Werner Erhard, but also of consumerism: "As the self-help entrepreneur, Ellsworth is portrayed as a walking collection of lifestyle-status points and sign-values ("I've got my Rolls-Royce!"). Conspicuous consumption and commodity fetishism define his personality." Goldman explained that the Mork and Mindy episode succeeded in distinguishing between criticism of the Ellsworth training, and criticism of Ellsworth, citing Ellsworth's character traits of: "tyranny, selfishness, open greed, and flaunting of the accoutrements of his vulgar money-making." In the end of the segment of the episode parodying est, Mork wins out over the Ellsworth philosophy by instead calling to mind universal humanistic moral values.[22] David Letterman received positive praise for his portrayal of "Ellsworth" in the episode.[24][25][26]

Six Feet Under Edit

 
Alice Krige portrayed a seminar leader of "The Plan" (a parody on "The Forum") in the 2002 Six Feet Under episode, "The Plan".[27]

Six Feet Under Episode 16, of Season 2, "The Plan", featured a seminar-delivery organization called "The Plan", which the character Claire Fisher immediately compared to est. Actress Alice Krige portrays "Alma" the seminar leader of "The Plan" - who uses jargon related to the "blueprint" for building a house in order to convey concepts about self-improvement. She singles out the character Ruth and berates her for "tiptoeing around her own house like she's afraid of waking someone up." Ruth begins to use jargon from the course in her conversations with family, and complains to her daughter that she cannot yet go to sleep after coming home from her seminar because she must first do "homework" from the course. This homework includes writing a letter to her dead mother forgiving her for "all the terrible things she did to me", and writing a letter to herself, describing how she will "renovate" her life. During the following day of "The Plan", the seminar leader gives the group a new assignment: to go outside to ready banks of phones, and call their family members to inform them of specifically how they wish to "renovate their homes" together. In the seminar, the leader asks everyone to close their eyes and imagine that everyone else is laughing at them for being stupid, and then asks the participants if they get the joke. Everyone does, except Ruth, who rants at the course instructor. After her rant, the leader congratulates her for "knocking down her old house", and proceeds to tell her that now she can rebuild a new house.[28]

Analysis in secondary sources and books on Six Feet Under have compared the training in "The Plan" to the current incarnation of Erhard's trainings, Landmark Education.[29] Reading Six Feet Under: TV to Die For by Akass et al. have compared "The Plan" to est and The Forum.[27] Akass cites the episode while analyzing the phenomenon of self-improvement, and notes that: "Repairing her shingles often leaves Ruth in shackles."[27] She writes that: "the series performs the logic of self-help, both its silly and seductive sides."[27] However, she also points out that Ruth's rant at the end of her seminar is cathartic for Ruth, and she ends her analysis of the episode by asking: "So, what do we make of our times when all this supposed nonsense actually works?"[27]

Theatre Edit

In 2008, Climate Theater in San Francisco, California showed a play called The Group, written by Robert Quillen Camp and performed by Ryan Eggensperger, and inspired, according to Climate "by the largely American tradition of packaging and selling self-empowerment, from est and the Landmark Forum to Norman Vincent Peale and The Secret".[30] The play is an immersive performance piece[31] where audience members sit in a circle and wear audio headsets, through which they listen to the charismatic leader's voice and sound effects.[32] The production ran from May 29, 2008 to June 14, 2008.[30]

Robert Avila of the San Francisco Bay Guardian called The Group: "in-your-face comedy in a droll send-up of est-like self-actualization programs," and a spoof of "recent incarnations" including The Secret and Landmark Forum.[33] Avila gave the play a positive review, noting its "inspired writing, sharp humor, and simple yet slick production".[33] In a review of the play for the San Jose Mercury News, Karen D'Souza wrote: From est to 'The Secret,' this is a playful lampoon of 'healing philosophies'".[34] D'Souza also reviewed the play positively, writing: " Writer-director Robert Quillen Camp slyly pokes fun at reducing the human experience to one-size-fits-all platitudes and besmirching belief systems with "cash-only" workshops."[34] Pat Craig wrote in Contra Costa Times: "After a lifetime of enduring various human potential programs, from the chanted mantras of transcendental meditation to the institutionalized loathing of est, 'The Group' seems a bit tame for satire to a veteran of the high-profit mind games."[35] In a review for the San Francisco Examiner, Leslie Katz said, "In the end, the show provides excellent therapy. As those who aren't swayed by expensive self-help seminars know, laughter is indeed the best medicine."[36]

Literature Edit

In the 2016 novel Heat and Light, by Jennifer Haigh, the character Kip the Whip attends an est Training led by Werner Erhard.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Getting it – the psychology of est, by Dr. Sheridan Fenwick, p.44
  2. ^ Hirsch, Deborah (January 20, 2015). "David Wayne Reed gives his characters and his audience a hand in Help Yourself". Pitch Magazine.
  3. ^ a b c Mantlo, Bill; John Buscema; Klaus Janson (March 1980). "The Dreadcliff Cuckoos: The best things in life are free, right? Especially if by "best" you mean skulduggery, kidnapping, mind-manipulation, torture and murder, all through the graces of B.E.S.T". Stan Lee presents: Howard the Duck. New York City, New York: Marvel Comics Group, Office of Publication. 1 (4): 38–63.
  4. ^ Mano, D. Keith (1998). Take Five. Dalkey Archive Press. p. 180. ISBN 1-56478-193-3.
  5. ^ Brooks, Larry (November 29, 2001). Pressure Points. Onyx. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-451-41001-6. ISBN 0-451-41001-7
  6. ^ Hurwitz, Gregg Andrew (2004). The Program. HarperCollins. p. 176. ISBN 0-06-053040-5.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Silvester, Christopher; Steven Bach (2002). The Grove Book of Hollywood. Grove Press. pp. 555–560. ISBN 0-8021-3878-0.
  8. ^ Mulligan, Pat (2006). The Life and Times of a Hollywood Bad Boy. AuthorHouse. p. 94. ISBN 1-4259-5008-6.
  9. ^ Staff (2005-05-27). "Our Reynolds Rap -- Burt Is Inert;". The Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones & Company.
  10. ^ Staff (1987-01-25). "Videos Bring Back Grit, Grime, Romance of Football Movies". The Charlotte Observer. The McClatchy Company.
  11. ^ a b c Reiner, Lucas (2003). DVD commentary for The Spirit of '76, 2003 edition (DVD). Castle Rock Entertainment, Warner Home Video.
  12. ^ Staff. (2003). DVD Verdict Review. 2003 Bill Gibron. pp. The Spirit Of '76.
  13. ^ Hinson, Hal (February 17, 1995). "Heavyweights". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2008-04-20.
  14. ^ a b c Snider, Suzanne (May 2003). "EST, Werner Erhard, And The Corporatization of Self-Help". The Believer. 2003-2007 The Believer.
  15. ^ Grigoriadis, Vanessa (July 9, 2001). "Pay Money, Be Happy: For thousands of new yorkers, happiness is a $375, three-day self-help Seminar. Welcome to EST: The Next Generation". New York Magazine.
  16. ^ Staff (2006-06-25). "Why you will find yourself at the Forum". Daily Telegraph. News Limited Australia.
  17. ^ a b Ebert, Roger (October 15, 1999). "Review, Fight Club". Chicago Sun-Times.
  18. ^ Wilmington, Michael (2000-01-06). "Magnolia". Zap2it.com. Tribune Media Services, Inc.
  19. ^ Burleigh, Nina (October 2000). "Death of a Salesman". Details Magazine.
  20. ^ a b c Diamond, Nenari (2004). Life Long Learning - Transforming, Learning Discovering Through Living Life in Unlimitless Possibilities. Morrisville, North Carolina: Lulu. p. 33. ISBN 1-4116-2492-0.
  21. ^ a b Diamond, Nenari (2006). Stepping Into Spiritual Oneness: Spiritual Rememberings of the Soul Through Life Experience. Morrisville, North Carolina: Lulu. p. 169. ISBN 1-4116-5156-1.
  22. ^ a b c Goldman, Robert (May 1982). . Theory & Society. Hosted, Lewis & Clark College. 11: 363–388, Part 4. doi:10.1007/BF00211662. S2CID 140808952. Archived from the original on 2007-11-02. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  23. ^ Staff (8 February 1979). ""Mork & Mindy" Mork Goes Erk (1979)". Internet Movie Database. Amazon.com. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  24. ^ Tobey, Matthew. . Allmovie. All Media Guide, LLC. Archived from the original on 2006-04-26. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  25. ^ Liebenson, Donald (2004). "Mork & Mindy - The Complete First Season (1978): Amazon.com essential video". Amazon.com. Amazon.com, Inc. pp. Editorial Reviews. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  26. ^ Staff (November 5, 2004). "Mork & Mindy". Dallas Morning News.
  27. ^ a b c d e Akass, Kim; Janet McCabe; Mark Lawson (2005). Reading Six Feet Under: TV to Die For. I.B.Tauris. pp. 96–97. ISBN 1-85043-809-9.
  28. ^ Staff; Television Without Pity (March 24, 2002). "Six Feet Under, The Plan, Recap". Yahoo! TV. Yahoo! Inc. pp. 1–11. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
  29. ^ Venkatasubban, Sharmila (January 1, 2003). "Article of Faith". Pittsburgh City Paper.
  30. ^ a b "The Group". Climate Theater. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  31. ^ Buzzin' Lee Hartgrave (May 30, 2008). "Have a Little est - Have a Little Norman Vincent Peale or Learn The Secret". BeyondChron. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  32. ^ Dodds, Richard (May 29, 2008). "Summer stage attractions". Bay Area Reporter. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  33. ^ a b Avila, Robert (June 4, 2008). "Stage listings". San Francisco Bay Guardian. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  34. ^ a b D'Souza, Karen (May 30, 2008). "'The Group,' a witty parody of self-help therapy Ryan Eggensperger is cheesily charismatic as leader in memorable world premiere from Robert Quillen Camp". San Jose Mercury News. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  35. ^ Craig, Pat (June 3, 2008). "Sly 'Group' creeps up on you". Contra Costa Times. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  36. ^ Katz, Leslie (May 30, 2008). "Review: When positive thinking goes awry". San Francisco Examiner. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)

External links Edit

  • , Web site of "Friends of Werner Erhard"
Parodies
  • "Six Feet Under" The Plan (2002) at IMDb
  • The Spirit of '76 (1990) at IMDb
  • "Mork & Mindy" Mork Goes Erk (1979) at IMDb
  • Semi-Tough (1977) at IMDb

forum, popular, culture, werner, erhard, courses, have, been, referenced, popular, culture, various, forms, fictional, media, including, literature, film, television, theatre, original, course, known, delivered, company, erhard, seminars, training, under, name. Werner Erhard and his courses have been referenced in popular culture in various forms of fictional media including literature film television and theatre The original course known as est was delivered by the company Erhard Seminars Training est Under the name The Forum they were delivered by Werner Erhard and Associates Also the Landmark Forum a program created by Erhard s former employees after purchasing his intellectual property has had an influence on popular culture Some of these works have taken a comedic tack parodying Erhard and satirizing the methodology used in these courses Leonard Maltin praised Burt Reynolds s charm in Semi Tough a film that parodied est Both est and The Forum have been depicted more often in film and television than in literary works The 1977 film Semi Tough satirized Erhard and the est Training through the fictional Bismark Earthwalk Action Training in which Bert Convy portrayed a character said to have been a parody of Erhard Diana Ross and Joel Schumacher who had both taken the est training incorporated Werner Erhard s teachings into the 1978 musical film The Wiz The 1990 film The Spirit of 76 also parodied est with Rob Reiner portraying a trainer for the est like Be Inc Seminars Movie critics have also drawn parallels to est and Werner Erhard in reviews of the films Fight Club and Magnolia Concepts from the Landmark Forum were utilized by The Wachowskis in their film The Matrix Revolutions Werner Erhard s training programs have been parodied in television The 1979 episode of Mork amp Mindy Mork Goes Erk and the 2002 episode of Six Feet Under The Plan are the most notable In the Mork amp Mindy episode the Erhard parody character was played by David Letterman Madison Wisconsin s Broom Street Theater produced a play about Werner Erhard and The Forum in 1995 called Devil In Paradise The Fall and Rise of Werner Erhard This piece presented a fictionalized version of controversial issues surrounding Erhard The third and fourth season of the FX series The Americans contains a story line in which several recurring characters attend the est Training in or near Washington DC In a recreation of the est Training the lead character and Russian spy Phillip begins to confront his past and to question his purpose Contents 1 Background 2 Music 3 Fiction 3 1 est and successors in literature 4 Film 4 1 1970s 4 2 1980s 4 3 1990s 4 4 2000 present 5 Television 5 1 Mork amp Mindy 5 2 Six Feet Under 6 Theatre 7 Literature 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksBackground EditThe est Training was a two weekend 60 hour course offered from late 1971 to late 1984 The purpose of the seminar was to transform one s ability to experience living so that the situations one had been trying to change or had been putting up with clear up just in the process of life itself 1 It brought to the forefront the ideas of transformation personal responsibility accountability and possibility 2 Music EditJohn Denver wrote the song Looking for Space which was dedicated to Erhard and became a theme song for est R E M briefly referenced the est Training in their song Country Feedback Fiction Editest and successors in literature Edit Depictions of est and The Forum in literature have dealt with direct references to these trainings through such books as Werner Erhard The Transformation of a Man The Founding of est by W W Bartley III 60 Hours that Transform Your Life by Adelaide Bry Getting It The Psychology of est by Sheridan Fenwick est Making Life Work by Robert Hargrove The est Experience by James Kettle and The Book of est by Luke Rhinehart est was parodied in the March 1980 issue of the Marvel Comics Howard the Duck series titled The Dreadcliff Cuckoos 3 In The Dreadcliff Cuckoos the character Werner Blowhard heads the organization Bozoes Eagerly Serving Tyrants abbreviated B E S T 3 In his first appearance in the comic Blowhard states I ve got It Have you got It 3 The Werner Blowhard character was later referenced in D Keith Mano s 1982 novel Take Five 4 In Pressure Points a 2001 novel by Larry Brooks one of the book s protagonists asserts that the programs developed by Werner Erhard William Penn Patrick and Alexander Everett all came from the same source 5 The Program a 2004 novel by Hurwitz quotes Erhard prior to the opening of the prologue 6 Film Edit1970s Edit nbsp est advocate Valerie Harper contacted Bert Convy on behalf of Werner Erhard during the filming of Semi Tough 7 Werner Erhard and his est Training programs and later The Forum have been parodied in films both directly and through more subtle references Still in other films that did not directly intend to parody the subject matter other reviewers have found elements of the est movement as applied to the genre of fictional self help films The 1977 movie Semi Tough starring Burt Reynolds parodied the est training 8 Bert Convy played Friedrich Bismark a caricature of Werner Erhard Bismark s organization and its training went by the name B E A T which stands for Bismark Earthwalk Action Training In real life Erhard had a Mercedes Benz with a llicense plate that said SO WUT in the film Bismark rode in a limousine that said BEAT IT A form of Rolfing was also parodied in the film and Lotte Lenya s character Clara Pelf called PELFING was described as a Rolf like masseuse 7 The press caught on to this satire of Erhard in the film and gave these sections of the film positive reviews The Wall Street Journal did not give an overall positive review but did appreciate the portions where Werner Erhard was parodied The movie isn t much an erratic ramble But it has some pleasant moments and a delicious send up of The self improvement guru Werner Erhard 9 The Charlotte Observer praised Bert Convy s portrayal of the self help guru Frederick Bismark writing Bert Convy is a hilariously smug consciousness raiser with a more than passing resemblance to est s Werner Erhard 10 After the film s release Bert Convy appeared on The Tonight Show and discussed his experiences when he attended an est training seminar in preparation for his role as Frederick Bismark During actual filming on Semi Tough Convy received a late night phone call from actress Valerie Harper known in Hollywood as a devoted student of Werner Erhard She related to Convy that Erhard was pleased with the role and she wished him success in the film However Convy suspected that her real reason for calling was to subtly pressure him to go easy on his parody of Erhard in the film 7 However several EST graduates shunned the film for making fun of the training its methods its philosophy as well as Werner Erhard himself nbsp est student Diana Ross worked some of Werner Erhard s teachings into the film version of The Wiz 7 The Grove Book of Hollywood wrote that the 1978 film The Wiz was influenced by Werner Erhard s teachings and est because actress Diana Ross and writer Joel Schumacher were very enamored of Werner Erhard 7 The film s producer Rob Cohen noted that before I knew it the movie was becoming an est ian fable full of est buzzwords about knowing who you are and sharing and all that I hated the script a lot But it was hard to argue with Diana because she was recognizing in this script all of this stuff that she had worked out in est seminars 7 Schumacher spoke positively of the results of the est training saying I will be eternally grateful for learning that I was responsible for my life 7 Of est and Erhard references in the film itself The Grove Book of Hollywood notes that the speech delivered by the Good Witch played by actress Lena Horne at the end of the film was a litany of est like platitudes and the book also makes est comparisons to the song Believe in Yourself 7 In the 1979 film Manhattan Woody Allen s character Isaac Davis says of his first wife She was a kindergarten teacher then she got into drugs and moved to San Francisco She went to est became a Moonie She works for the William Morris Agency now 1980s Edit Circle of Power also known as Mystique Brainwash and The Naked Weekend is a 1981 film co produced by Gary Mehlman Anthony Quinn and Jeffrey White and based on the non fiction book The Pit A Group Encounter Defiled It stars Yvette Mimieux in her final film performance 1990s Edit nbsp Rob Reiner portrayed Dr Cash a parody of Werner Erhard in the 1990 film The Spirit of 76 11 In the 1990 film The Spirit of 76 Rob Reiner plays Dr Hedley Cash referred to only as Dr Cash in the film an abusive trainer for the est like Be Inc Seminars who traps time traveler Heinz 57 played by Geoff Hoyle in one of his seminars and continually refers to him as Heinz Asshole 12 In the DVD commentary for the 2003 release of the film director Lucas Reiner stated that the Absentee oblivious self involved parents who don t notice their kids have a spaceship was a reference to the self involved nature of adults during the 1970s and their propensity for self improvement 11 Reiner stated that these scenes were meant to symbolize the 70s hunger for self improvement and the extreme ends that people would go to in order to improve themselves Lucas Reiner had never personally attended one of Werner Erhard s seminars but had heard that attendants were not allowed to leave often peed in their pants and were called assholes and insulted publicly Reiner noted that once his brother Carl put on the Dr Cash costume he played his character perfectly 11 Heavyweights a 1995 comedy film portrays a fat camp for kids that is taken over by fitness guru Tony Perkis played by Ben Stiller In a review of the film in The Washington Post Hal Hinson compared Stiller s portrayal of the Perkis character to Erhard and called him the Werner Erhard of slide aerobics 13 nbsp Fight Club author Chuck Palahniuk s work was influenced by his experiences in the Landmark Forum 14 Fight Club author Chuck Palahniuk was a graduate of The Landmark Forum or The Forum for short and this later influenced his work 14 15 16 In his review of the 1999 film adaptation of the book Roger Ebert likened the character Tyler Durden to Werner Erhard 17 Ebert wrote that Tyler Durden was a bully Werner Erhard plus S amp M a leather club operator without the decor 17 Fight Club film producer Ross Grayson Bell believes that his creative synchronicity with writer Palahniuk was due to their shared experience of attending The Forum 14 In the 1999 film Magnolia Tom Cruise played a motivational guru named Frank T J Mackey who was the author of a self help book called Seduce and Destroy This work was meant to teach men how to get women to sleep with them The Frank T J Mackey character in the film has been likened to a sort of pop TV blend of Werner Erhard and Bob Guccione strutting around a stage with cocksure arrogance indoctrinating his acolytes in the arts of machismo and seduction 18 The Frank T J Mackey character has also been compared by whom to another motivational trainer influenced by Erhard in Details Magazine 19 2000 present Edit nbsp The Wachowskis drew on their experiences in the Landmark Forum seminar series when they wrote The Matrix Revolutions 20 21 In her 2004 book Life Long Learning Transforming Learning Discovering Through Living Life in Unlimitless Possibilities Lady Nenari Anne Diamond writes that filmmakers The Wachowskis got the inspiration for the screenplay to The Matrix Revolutions while participating in a Landmark Forum seminar series 20 Diamond also analyzes The Matrix Revolutions and the messages imparted in the film in the context of her own personal experiences in the Landmark Forum She describes a tautologous exchange between Agent Smith and Neo in the film where Neo is asked by Smith Why do you continue to do this Mr Anderson and Neo responds Because I choose to Diamond uses this example to explain the Landmark Forum s discussion of choice and decision 20 Diamond provides further analysis of other Landmark Forum concepts utilized in The Matrix Revolutions in her book Stepping Into Spiritual Oneness Spiritual Rememberings of the Soul Through Life Experience including the concept that we all choose to BE who we are being in each and every moment of our experience 21 Television EditMork amp Mindy Edit nbsp David Letterman portrayed a parody of Werner Erhard in an episode of Mork amp Mindy called Mork Goes Erk 22 Parody and satire of est and The Forum in television has taken a more direct approach than in literature and film Characters have been shown attending seminars and having negative outcomes as a result Mork amp Mindy dealt with this in a lighter fashion dealing with a small introduction of individuals to the training in a home environment in season one episode seventeen Mork Goes Erk 23 In the episode David Letterman portrayed an Erhard like character by the name of Ellsworth offering ERK or Ellsworth Revitalization Konditioning 22 In a 1982 article in the journal Theory amp Society Lewis amp Clark College sociology professor Robert Goldman compared and contrasted Letterman s Ellsworth character and his training program to that of Werner Erhard Goldman noted that the episode spent time lampooning Werner Erhard and est like commercial pop psychologies However Goldman went on to note that the inherent problem with Ellsworth Revitalization Konditioning was not the training but Ellsworth himself Ellsworth is seen not just as a parody of Werner Erhard but also of consumerism As the self help entrepreneur Ellsworth is portrayed as a walking collection of lifestyle status points and sign values I ve got my Rolls Royce Conspicuous consumption and commodity fetishism define his personality Goldman explained that the Mork and Mindy episode succeeded in distinguishing between criticism of the Ellsworth training and criticism of Ellsworth citing Ellsworth s character traits of tyranny selfishness open greed and flaunting of the accoutrements of his vulgar money making In the end of the segment of the episode parodying est Mork wins out over the Ellsworth philosophy by instead calling to mind universal humanistic moral values 22 David Letterman received positive praise for his portrayal of Ellsworth in the episode 24 25 26 Six Feet Under Edit nbsp Alice Krige portrayed a seminar leader of The Plan a parody on The Forum in the 2002 Six Feet Under episode The Plan 27 Six Feet Under Episode 16 of Season 2 The Plan featured a seminar delivery organization called The Plan which the character Claire Fisher immediately compared to est Actress Alice Krige portrays Alma the seminar leader of The Plan who uses jargon related to the blueprint for building a house in order to convey concepts about self improvement She singles out the character Ruth and berates her for tiptoeing around her own house like she s afraid of waking someone up Ruth begins to use jargon from the course in her conversations with family and complains to her daughter that she cannot yet go to sleep after coming home from her seminar because she must first do homework from the course This homework includes writing a letter to her dead mother forgiving her for all the terrible things she did to me and writing a letter to herself describing how she will renovate her life During the following day of The Plan the seminar leader gives the group a new assignment to go outside to ready banks of phones and call their family members to inform them of specifically how they wish to renovate their homes together In the seminar the leader asks everyone to close their eyes and imagine that everyone else is laughing at them for being stupid and then asks the participants if they get the joke Everyone does except Ruth who rants at the course instructor After her rant the leader congratulates her for knocking down her old house and proceeds to tell her that now she can rebuild a new house 28 Analysis in secondary sources and books on Six Feet Under have compared the training in The Plan to the current incarnation of Erhard s trainings Landmark Education 29 Reading Six Feet Under TV to Die For by Akass et al have compared The Plan to est and The Forum 27 Akass cites the episode while analyzing the phenomenon of self improvement and notes that Repairing her shingles often leaves Ruth in shackles 27 She writes that the series performs the logic of self help both its silly and seductive sides 27 However she also points out that Ruth s rant at the end of her seminar is cathartic for Ruth and she ends her analysis of the episode by asking So what do we make of our times when all this supposed nonsense actually works 27 Theatre EditIn 2008 Climate Theater in San Francisco California showed a play called The Group written by Robert Quillen Camp and performed by Ryan Eggensperger and inspired according to Climate by the largely American tradition of packaging and selling self empowerment from est and the Landmark Forum to Norman Vincent Peale and The Secret 30 The play is an immersive performance piece 31 where audience members sit in a circle and wear audio headsets through which they listen to the charismatic leader s voice and sound effects 32 The production ran from May 29 2008 to June 14 2008 30 Robert Avila of the San Francisco Bay Guardian called The Group in your face comedy in a droll send up of est like self actualization programs and a spoof of recent incarnations including The Secret and Landmark Forum 33 Avila gave the play a positive review noting its inspired writing sharp humor and simple yet slick production 33 In a review of the play for the San Jose Mercury News Karen D Souza wrote From est to The Secret this is a playful lampoon of healing philosophies 34 D Souza also reviewed the play positively writing Writer director Robert Quillen Camp slyly pokes fun at reducing the human experience to one size fits all platitudes and besmirching belief systems with cash only workshops 34 Pat Craig wrote in Contra Costa Times After a lifetime of enduring various human potential programs from the chanted mantras of transcendental meditation to the institutionalized loathing of est The Group seems a bit tame for satire to a veteran of the high profit mind games 35 In a review for the San Francisco Examiner Leslie Katz said In the end the show provides excellent therapy As those who aren t swayed by expensive self help seminars know laughter is indeed the best medicine 36 Literature EditIn the 2016 novel Heat and Light by Jennifer Haigh the character Kip the Whip attends an est Training led by Werner Erhard See also Edit nbsp Film portal nbsp Psychology portal nbsp Television portalHuman Potential Movement Large Group Awareness Training Parody religion Popular culture Religious satire Self helpReferences Edit Getting it the psychology of est by Dr Sheridan Fenwick p 44 Hirsch Deborah January 20 2015 David Wayne Reed gives his characters and his audience a hand in Help Yourself Pitch Magazine a b c Mantlo Bill John Buscema Klaus Janson March 1980 The Dreadcliff Cuckoos The best things in life are free right Especially if by best you mean skulduggery kidnapping mind manipulation torture and murder all through the graces of B E S T Stan Lee presents Howard the Duck New York City New York Marvel Comics Group Office of Publication 1 4 38 63 Mano D Keith 1998 Take Five Dalkey Archive Press p 180 ISBN 1 56478 193 3 Brooks Larry November 29 2001 Pressure Points Onyx p 77 ISBN 978 0 451 41001 6 ISBN 0 451 41001 7 Hurwitz Gregg Andrew 2004 The Program HarperCollins p 176 ISBN 0 06 053040 5 a b c d e f g h Silvester Christopher Steven Bach 2002 The Grove Book of Hollywood Grove Press pp 555 560 ISBN 0 8021 3878 0 Mulligan Pat 2006 The Life and Times of a Hollywood Bad Boy AuthorHouse p 94 ISBN 1 4259 5008 6 Staff 2005 05 27 Our Reynolds Rap Burt Is Inert The Wall Street Journal Dow Jones amp Company Staff 1987 01 25 Videos Bring Back Grit Grime Romance of Football Movies The Charlotte Observer The McClatchy Company a b c Reiner Lucas 2003 DVD commentary forThe Spirit of 76 2003 edition DVD Castle Rock Entertainment Warner Home Video Staff 2003 DVD Verdict Review 2003 Bill Gibron pp The Spirit Of 76 Hinson Hal February 17 1995 Heavyweights The Washington Post Retrieved 2008 04 20 a b c Snider Suzanne May 2003 EST Werner Erhard And The Corporatization of Self Help The Believer 2003 2007 The Believer Grigoriadis Vanessa July 9 2001 Pay Money Be Happy For thousands of new yorkers happiness is a 375 three day self help Seminar Welcome to EST The Next Generation New York Magazine Staff 2006 06 25 Why you will find yourself at the Forum Daily Telegraph News Limited Australia a b Ebert Roger October 15 1999 Review Fight Club Chicago Sun Times Wilmington Michael 2000 01 06 Magnolia Zap2it com Tribune Media Services Inc Burleigh Nina October 2000 Death of a Salesman Details Magazine a b c Diamond Nenari 2004 Life Long Learning Transforming Learning Discovering Through Living Life in Unlimitless Possibilities Morrisville North Carolina Lulu p 33 ISBN 1 4116 2492 0 a b Diamond Nenari 2006 Stepping Into Spiritual Oneness Spiritual Rememberings of the Soul Through Life Experience Morrisville North Carolina Lulu p 169 ISBN 1 4116 5156 1 a b c Goldman Robert May 1982 Hegemony and Managed Critique in Prime Time Television A Critical Reading of Mork and Mindy Theory amp Society Hosted Lewis amp Clark College 11 363 388 Part 4 doi 10 1007 BF00211662 S2CID 140808952 Archived from the original on 2007 11 02 Retrieved 2007 10 29 Staff 8 February 1979 Mork amp Mindy Mork Goes Erk 1979 Internet Movie Database Amazon com Retrieved 2007 10 29 Tobey Matthew Mork amp Mindy Mork Goes Erk Allmovie All Media Guide LLC Archived from the original on 2006 04 26 Retrieved 2007 10 29 Liebenson Donald 2004 Mork amp Mindy The Complete First Season 1978 Amazon com essential video Amazon com Amazon com Inc pp Editorial Reviews Retrieved 2007 10 29 Staff November 5 2004 Mork amp Mindy Dallas Morning News a b c d e Akass Kim Janet McCabe Mark Lawson 2005 Reading Six Feet Under TV to Die For I B Tauris pp 96 97 ISBN 1 85043 809 9 Staff Television Without Pity March 24 2002 Six Feet Under The Plan Recap Yahoo TV Yahoo Inc pp 1 11 Retrieved 2007 10 28 Venkatasubban Sharmila January 1 2003 Article of Faith Pittsburgh City Paper a b The Group Climate Theater Retrieved 2008 06 09 Buzzin Lee Hartgrave May 30 2008 Have a Little est Have a Little Norman Vincent Peale or Learn The Secret BeyondChron Retrieved 2008 06 09 Dodds Richard May 29 2008 Summer stage attractions Bay Area Reporter Retrieved 2008 06 09 a b Avila Robert June 4 2008 Stage listings San Francisco Bay Guardian Retrieved 2008 06 09 a b D Souza Karen May 30 2008 The Group a witty parody of self help therapy Ryan Eggensperger is cheesily charismatic as leader in memorable world premiere from Robert Quillen Camp San Jose Mercury News Retrieved 2008 06 09 Craig Pat June 3 2008 Sly Group creeps up on you Contra Costa Times Retrieved 2008 06 09 Katz Leslie May 30 2008 Review When positive thinking goes awry San Francisco Examiner a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help External links EditWerner Erhard at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource Werner Erhard Web site of Friends of Werner Erhard Parodies Six Feet Under The Plan 2002 at IMDb The Spirit of 76 1990 at IMDb Mork amp Mindy Mork Goes Erk 1979 at IMDb Semi Tough 1977 at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title EST and The Forum in popular culture amp oldid 1172675933, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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