Dispositivo Alteracion Mental
by Malditos Cyborgs.org
__________________________________________________________________________
From: nobody@REPLAY.COM (Anonymous)
Newsgroups:
alt.religion.scientology
Subject: Scientology buys own books (yawn !)
Date: 5 Sep 1995 12:30:32 +0200
San Diego Union April 15, 1990 front page article
HUBBARD
HOT-AUTHOR STATUS CALLED ILLUSION
by
Mike McIntyre
In
1981, St. Martin's Press was offered a sure thing. L. Ron
Hubbard, the pulp writer turned religious leader, had written
his first science-fiction novel in more than 30 years. If
St. Martin's published it, Hubbard aides promised the firm,
subsidiary organizations of Hubbard's Church of Scientology
would buy at least 15,000 copies.
"Battlefield
Earth," priced at $24.95, was released the next year
in hardcover, rare for a science-fiction title.
Despite
mixed reviews, the book quickly sold 120,000 copies -enough
to place it on The New York Times best-seller list.
"Five,
six, seven people at a time would come in, with cash in
hand, buying the book," said Dave Dutton, of Dutton's
Books, a group of four stores in the Los Angeles area. "They'd
blindly ask for the book. They would buy two or three copies
at a time with $50 bills. I had the suspicion that there
was something not quite right about it."
Dutton
only suspected what others claim to know for fact. The book's
sudden success, say dozens of former Scientologists and
book dealers, was the result of a church plan to create
the illusion of L. Ron Hubbard as a hot author. The church,
they say, sustains the myth - 15 New York Times best sellers
and counting - through dubious marketing tactics and the
manipulation of an obedient flock of consumers. The church's
orchestration of best sellers, say former Scientologists,
is merely a public relations means to a larger end. The
goal is to establish an identity for Hubbard other than
as the founder of a controversial religious movement. His
broadened appeal can then be used to recruit new members
into the Church of Scientology. The church uses two businesses
to peddle its books, Author Services Inc., a Hollywood literary
agency, sells the rights to publish Hubbard's works to Bridge
Publications Inc., a Los Angeles company.
A
Church of Scientology spokeswoman, Leisa Goodman, said that
the church, Author Services and Bridge are seperate and
independent. But former Scientology officials say that Bridge
and Author Services are staffed almost exclusively by Scientologists
and operate within the church hierarchy. "Author Services
used to always think of schemes to make more money,"
said Vicki Azneran, the former inspector general of the
Religious Technology Center, an organization that former
church members say runs the entire Scientology empire.
"Bridge
gets the money from a totally controlled cult population."They
send people into bookstores. You get a phone call: 'Your
job is to go down to the B. Dalton. Take as many people
as you need to buy up all the books so they'll have to reorder.'"
Numerous
calls to Author Services were not returned. Church and Bridge
officials denied that sales of Hubbard's books have been
artificially inflated.
But
others dispute that claim, saying the church perfected its
technique through the 1980s. After the success with St.Martin's,
a reputable New York publisher, Bridge took over. Its 1983
paperback release of "Battlefield Earth" was a
best seller. Around the same time, Bridge's re-issue of
"Dianetics," the scripture of Scientology that
Hubbard wrote in 1950, returned to best seller lists.
Hubbard's
death in January 1986 did not break the streak. From 1985
to 1987, Bridge published Hubbard's 10-volume science-fiction
series, "Mission Earth." All 10 books were hardcover
best sellers. Subsequent paperback releases of the early
volumes also were best sellers. And, if form follows, the
volumes yet to be released in paperback also will be best
sellers.
At
the close of the '80s, Bridge claimed Hubbard's books had
generated $90 million in revenues for the publishing industry.
But unlike the cases of Tom Clancy or Danielle Steele, L.
Ron Hubbard's meteoric rise as a best-selling author may
have little to do with readers. "We were told to go
out and buy a bunch of copies of 'Battlefield Earth' so
it would become a best seller," said
Dr.
Frank Gerbode, the former head of the Scientology mission
in Palo Alto. "The arguement we were given was, if
he became famous again as a science-fiction writer, it would
improve his status." Aznaran, who defected from the
church in 1987, said Scientologists comply because the church
teaches them that the future of their religion and their
souls is linked to the success of Hubbard's novels.
"Scientologists
are told they're supposed to buy lots of those books,"
Aznaran said. "They're told they're helping save the
world with Scientology. If they can create a good image
for Hubbard, they will be assured spiritual salvation."
MANUFACTURING
A BEST SELLER
There
was a time when Hubbard's fiction required no artificial
boosts to succeed. In the 1930's, he was a popular and enormously
prolific pulp adventure writer, publishing millions of words.
In
1938, Hubbard switched genres. With writers such as Robert
Heinlein, Isaac Asimov and A.E. Van Vogt, he ushered in
the Golden Age of science fiction. His heroes tended to
be supermen who drew on highly developed mental powers to
save the world. By the late 1940s, nearly 100 of his novels
had been published, including "Final Blackout,"
an early classic of the field.
But
his voluminous output did not translate into wealth. "Writing
science fiction for about a penny a word is no way to make
a living," Hubbard said to a 1947 gathering of the
Eastern Science Fiction Association. "If you really
want to make a million, the quickest way is to start your
own religion."
The
remark proved prophetic. Hubbard founded the Church of Scientology
in 1955 and started amassing his fortune. By the time of
his death in 1986, reported Forbes magazine, his organization
was worth $400 million. Nearing the end of his life, the
cult leader apparently grew nostalgic for his first vocation.
"I'm very proud of also being known as a science-fiction
writer," Hubbard wrote in his introduction to "Battlefield
Earth." The book, he said, "celebrates my golden
wedding with the muse. Fifty years a professional - 1930-1980."
Harvey
Haber, a former Scientologist who served as Hubbard's literary
aide, was dispatched to New York to sell the manuscript.
Hubbard demanded that the book be represented by a major
literary agency and placed with one of the 10 largest publishers.
The church and Bridge Publications were to play no role.
"He
wanted to prove to everyone and all that he still had it,"
Haber said. "That he was the best in the world."
But 58 New York literary agencies thought otherwise, Haber
said. "Not one of them would touch it." In Haber's
opinion, "The book was a piece of s---."
Church
officials didn't dare tell Hubbard his book was unmarketable,
said Haber. "You would've been handed your head."
Thus, he said, was hatched the plan to offer guaranteed
sales in return for publication. Even that was not enough
for some publishers. David Hartwell, who in 1981 was director
of science fiction at Simon & Schuster, declined to
publish "Battlefield Earth" despite guaranteed
sales of 35,000 copies. "I didn't think it was a terribly
good book," Hartwell said.
Hubbard's
aides then knocked on St. Martin's door, and the publisher
welcomed them in. The book was published in August 1982.
The church, Haber said, transferred funds from its international
reserves to buy 25,000 copies of "Battlefield Earth"
from St. Martin's. Bridge Publications and its European
affiliate, New Era Publications, were then ordered to replace
the money. About the same time, Author Services was created,
allegedly to manage Hubbard's finances and those of the
church. St. Martin's senior editor Michael Denneny confirmed
that a deal was struck. He recalled, however, that Author
Services guaranteed to buy 15,000 to 20,000 copies. But
when "Battlefield Earth" was published, he said,
Author Services bought more copies than originally promised.
"The
Author Services people were very rambunctious," Denneny
said. "They wanted to make it a New York Times best
seller. They were obsessed by that." When "Battlefield
Earth" reached the shelves, the Cult Awareness Network,
a national non-profit clearinghouse for information on cults,
started hearing from book dealers in the New York area.
"Bookstores
were calling us and asking what was happening," said
Priscilla Coates, then director of the network. "People
were calling them up and ordering multiple copies. The largest
(order) was over 100." Some Scientologists noticed
that these tactics had a familiar ring to them. Hana Whitfield,
a personal aide to Hubbard from 1967 to 1977, said the Scientology
leader routinely issued "project orders" in the
1970s to buy "Dianetics."
Church
members were given lump sums of up to $50,000, Whitfield
said, and sent to book stores.
"Some
of them had a quota. For example: 'Buy 50 copies from this
B. Dalton on this street every two weeks.' Or: 'Buy 50 copies
from that Waldenbooks on that street every other week.'
"As they were bought, they would be disposed of, or
given to libraries, or stored in warehouses, or sent back
to the printer and recycled."
A
Riverside librarian recalled that throughout the '70s, the
county's 30 branches frequently received donated copies
of "Dianetics." "I remember they used to
come in boxes...about five books per box," said Billie
Dancy, head of the Riverside Central Library. "They'd
arrive in the mail."
The
church's techniques were a bit more refined when Hubbard
resumed his literary career in the early 1980s. Vicki Aznaran
said each of Scientology's 419 subsidiary organizations
and missions has orders to fund a seperate checking account
called "The Book Account." Bridge Publications,
she said, is a signatory on all of the accounts.
"Bridge
holds the checkbooks," Aznaran said. "Bridge just
writes checks to itself. "All Scientology organizations
are required to buy so many books. They are just shipped
the books. They have warehouses full of books. Bridge just
had books printed. They have this captive purchasing group
that has no choice in buying them. It would be like Stephen
King billing B. Dalton for books it didn't want."
There
are numerous stories of Scientologists being coerced to
buy Hubbard's books. Gerbode, the former head of the Palo
Alto mission, said he was required to stock 100 copies of
every Hubbard title. "We ended up with a huge storeroom
of books we couldn't get rid of," he said. Bent Corydon,
the former head of the Riverside mission, said in his unauthorized
biography of Hubbard that he was once ordered to sell his
flock 1,000 copies of "Battlefield Earth" or lose
his mission.
In
"L. Ron Hubbard: Messiah or Madman?" (co-authored
with L. Ron Hubbard Jr.), Corydon also recalled a 1982 meeting
where mission holders were given a directive by Wendall
Reynolds, introduced as the International Finance Dictator.
Reynolds, Corydon wrote, said that from then on each mission
would be required to pay 5 percent of its income to a TV
advertising campaign for "Dianetics."
SELLING
THE 'DOORSTOP'
At
819 pages, "Battlefield Earth" was thought at
the time to be the longest science-fiction novel ever published.
But it was only a preview of what was to follow. Readers
contemplating the 10-volume "Mission Earth," a
sprawling saga of an alien invasion, were faced with more
than 5,000 pages and 1,354,000 words.
The
science-fiction community refers to the series as "a
doorstop," said Bruce Pelz, a UCLA librarian and science-fiction
historian.
The
New York Times gave up after the first volume, dismissing
it as "a paralyzingly slow-moving adventure enlivend
by interludes of kinky sex, sendups of effeminate homosexuals
and a disregard of conventional grammar so global as to
suggest a satire on the possibility of communication through
language."
But
like "Dianetics" and "Battlefield Earth"
before it, copies of "Mission Earth" almost flew
off the shelves. Once again, former church officials say,
a captive audience of Scientologists was marshaled to move
the books through the checkout stands and onto the best-seller
lists.
But
by now, the church had also fine-tuned a complex marketing
apparatus. The tactics employed ranged from innovative and
aggressive advertising to almost giveaway discounts offered
to stores reporting to best-seller lists. The most visible
marketing method has been old-fashioned promotion, where
Bridge Publications stands alone in the book industry.
Bridge
advertises nationally on television, a rarity in publishing.
There are national print ads, radio spots, L. Ron Hubbard
billboards. In the current Spring Announcements issue of
Publishers Weekly, the bible of the book industry, Bridge
is the only publisher with a full-color three-page display.
It is also one of the few publishers to pursue the military
market, advertising in Stars and Stripes.
Bridge
is perhaps the only publisher involved in sports marketing,
sponsoring Indy 500 and Le Mans race cars. Broadcasts of
California Angels and San Fransisco Giants baseball games
are sponsored in part by Bridge. And Bridge is a major sponsor
of this summer's Goodwill Games in Seattle. Celebrity Scientologists,
including actress Karen Black and musician Chick Corea,
stump for Bridge on radio and TV shows. There are parades
and mall appearances by sciencefiction characters from Hubbard's
books. A "Mission Earth" album by rocker Edgar
Winter. Posters, banners, fliers, bumper stickers, buttons.
At book conventions, lavish parties complete with champagne
and chocolate-dipped fruit. When retailers place orders
by phone with Ingram Book Co., the nation's largest wholesaler,
they frequently hear clerks recite paid ads for Hubbard's
books.
Hubbard's
books are prominently displayed at B. Dalton and Waldenbooks
outlets - often in the prime floor space near the door -
in flashy cardboard cases provided by the publisher. Bridge
is a frequent advertiser in the chains' catalogs and newsletters.
Bridge also generously funds "co-op" ads, book-store
ads subsidized by a publisher.
All
of this costs a great deal of money. Bridge senior vice
president Mark McKinstry declined to reveal the publisher's
operating budget. But former employees said funds available
to market Hubbard's books are virtually without limit.
"You
can't think of Bridge as a normal business or publisher.
They are like the world's largest vanity press," said
Mary Mason, who worked in promotions for Bridge during release
of the "Mission Earth" series. "They pour
more money into promoting those books than most major publishers
would spend on an entire line of books. The whole thing
is set up to lose money. If Bridge ever wound up making
money, I don't think they'd know what to do."
Bob
Erdmann, a publishing consultant for Bridge from 1982 to
1988, said his former client is without comparison in the
industry. "You weren't limited by resources like other
publishing houses are," he said.
There
are also those who contend there are no limits on the discounts
Bridge offers certain customers. McKinstry said the publisher
sells its books to retail stores at a discount of 50 percent
to 52 percent - a rate he called "standard." But
two book dealers once among those surveyed for The New York
Times best-seller lists said Bridge has been willing to
go far higher. Larry Todd, formerly manager of Hunter's
Books in Beverly Hills, said Bridge offered him discounts
as high as 80 percent, a rate he had never been offered
by any publisher during his 35 years in the book business.
"They (Bridge) were willing to stock the books at next
to nothing if we would display them with the best sellers,"
said Todd, who declined.
Todd
said the offer came in 1986, during release of the "Mission
Earth" series, from Bridge sales representative Howard
Ramer. Todd quoted Ramer as saying: "We want to make
sure that (the new volume of 'Mission Earth') is on the
best-seller list. we're sure it will be and we want your
participation in helping it get there."
Reached
for comment, Ramer said: "I really don't remember that
at all. I can't say that it isn't true, but I can't reacll
that. I wouldn't be surprised that that might of happened."
Dave
Dutton, of Dutton's Books, said Bridge has offered him up
to 70 percent discounts - "twice what we would normally
get."
Dutton
said he quit stocking Hubbard's books several years ago
after some unpleasant sales pitches by Bridge representatives,
including a request for a window display. "We said
no, and they would not take no for an answer,"
Dutton
said. "They were almost intimidating." Michael
Kagay, editor of news surveys at The New York Times, said
the paper has "encountered no evidence" that Bridge
has manipulated the best-seller lists. He said that its
large survey sample - 3,000 stores - would minimize the
effect of "unusual patterns." But he also said:
"A change in sales patterns of the major chains has
a larger effect on the figures."
Spokeswomen
for B. Dalton and Waldenbooks, the nation's two largest
book chains, declined to reveal sales figures for Hubbard's
books. Sharon Jonas, of B. Dalton, which has about 1,000
stores, and Dara Tyson, of Waldenbooks, which has about
800 stores, also declined to reveal the discounts the chains
receive from Bridge. Both said that the chains have no data
on who is buying Hubbard's books from their stores.
"Who
buys his books?" said Tyson. "We don't know."
A former employee of both chains offered a more detailed
answer.
"What
we used to see was the L. Ron Hubbard people coming into
the chains, buying books out so we'd have to reorder them.
Then they'd return them," said Eleanor Lang, a former
manager of a B. Dalton store in the New York City area and
an ex-employee of Waldenbooks.
"Throughout
the '80s, B. Dalton had a liberal return policy," said
Lang, now the publicist for the science-fiction publisher
Tor Books. "Once a chain store sells through a book,
it's on their computer as having been sold. Once on the
computer, the computer automatically reorders it."
That might help explain why hardcover copies of the "Mission
Earth" series are a common sight these days on remainder
shelves.
"This
month Bridge Publications quietly offered remainder houses
237,848 'Mission Earth' hardcovers," publisher Lyle
Stuart wrote last July in his newsletter Hot News, under
the heading "That Scientology Scam." "This
must be something of a record in the remainder industry."
Through their spokeswomen, B. Dalton and Waldenbooks also
denied that they sell floor space to Bridge or any publisher.
Two
industry sources disputed that claim. Alice Allen, spokeswoman
for the American Booksellers Association, said retailers
maintain that the chains engage in the unpopular, but not
illegal, practice of selling prime display space. Betty
Wright, executive director of the National Association of
Independent Publishers, said prime display space is not
only sold, but that Bridge is a major purchaser of it.
"They're
buying floor space, there's no question about that. You
can't walk into a bookstore without seeing their big cardboard
displays," said Wright. "One of the most valuable
things you can do besides advertising is buy floor space.
there are 50,000 books published every year. And let's face
it, they can't all be in bookstores."
'THE
BRIDGE TO TOTAL FREEDOM'
Bridge's
senior vice president Mark McKinstry denied that the publisher
buys Hubbard's books to inflate sales. A spokeswoman for
the Church of Scientology also denied that Hubbard's followers
are required to purchase his books. "You can't make
anyone buy anything," said Leisa Goodman, from the
L. Ron Hubbard Office of Public Relations in Los Angeles.
"People spend their money because they want to."
Goodman also denied any official link between the church
and Bridge Publications.
"We
have a relationship like any client and publisher,"
Goodman said. "It's just probably closer." Much
closer, say former Scientologists. Vicki Aznaran, the former
inspector general of the Religious Technology Center, said
the center controls a Scientology network of 419 subsidiary
groups, including Bridge Publications. Her claim was echoed
by several other former church officials. In addition, the
Religious Technology Center is listed prominently in an
internal church document, "The Command Chart of Scientology."
The
Religious Technology Center appears at the top of the chart.
One level below, within a body called the Watchdog Committee,
is the office of the executive director of the Church of
Scientology International. And one level below that is Bridge
Publications.
Appearing
on the same level of the chart as Bridge is the church's
public relations office. In a 1989 issue of "Hotline,"
a Church of Scientology newsletter for its publicists, a
new public relations strategy was announced.
"For
the first time in the history of Dianetics and Scientology
the PR (public relations) positioning for L. Ron Hubbard
(LRH) has been established: "One of The Most Acclaimed
and Widely Read Authors of All Time. "This is a major
breakthrough that will have far-reaching effects for the
future of PR and the expansion of Scientology...
"There
have of course been a number of successful PR campaigns
for LRH and his works. The Dianetics Campaign, campaigns
for 'Battlefield Earth' and 'Mission Earth,' even local
campaigns...
"But
what we have lacked is the full power of a coordinated push
from ALL sectors of Scientology promoting LRH in a concerted
manner and with a single image.
"For
it is LRH's image on which all the rest of our expansion
depends. To the degree that LRH is made the stable terminal
in society, people will reach for his books and services
and we can get them on the Bridge to Total Freedom."