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its like you're becoming a different personI find that I just don't have much interest, even in stuff like the Marvel movies and shows that I would have been all over even a decade ago. My only real TV time tends to be my exercise time and with only 45 min., I find it easier to just pick stuff off Youtube (mostly music) than try to get into a TV episode that may be slightly longer than that or too short (sitcoms). In the end, though, it seems to be me losing some of my old tastes and not really finding new ones, though I do manage to get into stuff for short periods, then lose it again.
Expecting Mendy to start wearing Cardigans and smoking Meerchaum pipes soon...
Whaoh! I just started watching a Netflix Documentary just out, about the Rajneesh cult commune in Antelope Oregon in the early 80's, called "Wild Wild Country". A Maharishi bought a huge ranch, and out of nowhere, 2000 people wearing red outfits moved in, to this tiny town, led by a motorcade of rolls royces, and walking in droves down the streets ... and towing in mobile homes, within a week or two. After that, weirdness unfolded. I'm just starting to watch. I didn't even know about this. Why isn't this bizarre bit of history better known already? Unless this is a "mockumentary" and I'm being fooled?... but the footage looks old, it looks authentic, the "then and now" people seem aged, and legit. There are several articles out about the show, and the history. Does anyone remember it? I'm surprised there wasn't movie about it a long time ago. Maybe there was and I missed that, too.
You got me watching it.I just finished watching the whole Wild Wild Country documentary series. It's staggering...and the amount of footage they had covering important moments and events in the commune itself was also incredible. Spooky. And I'd never heard of Rajneesh Purim or the Sannyasins - or the Bhagwan, from India, who later became known as Osho, until his death. His business partner and criminal mastermind, Sheela - her pack of followers/ conspirators - thousands of people lived in this "utopian" (though full of crime and spying and drugging, unbenounced to most of the community) commune in Oregon - they literally took over and renamed a town (with their own paramilitaristic police force) - and others like it around the world. They went from wearing shades of red to white clothing when the guru changed his name to Osho after he too was deported back to India. The former wife of the producer of the Godfather became his assistant after Sheela fled and was later arrested, served time, and then deported. A few other famous people were also followers, and it looks to me like it influenced the overall New Age "spiritual but not religious" movement.
Still surprised I never knew anything about them. Neither has anyone I've asked, including those who were in their prime when it happened. I went on a family road trip, as a kid, to Oregon. I think it was the summer when all of it was coming to a head and was big news. We were in the same town where a suspected deliberate food poisoning outbreak occurred - thought to be perpetrated by Sannyasins. I remember being in the town, near the river dam. I guess we missed that. Never knew a thing about it. Don't remember scores of people dressed in red and purple and orange. This was a big 4 year saga.
Maybe not a death cult, but I get the feeling way more harm was going on than what was going on. Just one aspect - I saw very few shots of children so far. You would think in a group where sex is so free and encouraged there would be more children born within it. Or I missed that they really promoted condoms for the members.Though, I don't think they were a death cult or anything, overall, in their teachings (in fact most of their following remained obliviously happy and naive to the goings on at the top) they were up to some nefarious things.