Stamos said that every emerging idol, John Travolta, and the “sizzling women” he met in the visible class, who impressed him went to a meeting in the center of the famous church on Hollywood Boulevard.
John Stamos almost a member of the Church of Scientology.
At Fuller’s Home alum recalls expertise throughout Sunday’s episode Friends in Too Many Locations podcast.
Stamos was just 17 years ago when he said he was recruited to harass the Church by a “sizzling woman” in a visible class.
“With me, I was once in a visible class and there was a horrible woman, (who) said to me, ‘We’re all meeting at (a place) on Hollywood Boulevard, you better come after (class),'” Stamos shared. “I used to work at my dad’s restaurant and I said, ‘Dad, I have to go.’ So, I went and that’s what built Scientology.
It’s every “sizzling woman” and idol that appeared, famous Scientologist, John Travoltathat impressed Stamos to go to the Assembly.
“See (Fat) was like, ‘I want to be,” Stamos recalled. “I want to be John Travolta, but I am. That’s right, minus whatever he did.
When Travolta joined the Church of Scientology in 1975, Stamos said it ended up not being one of his earlier opening periods.
After arriving at the church, Stamos claims he was introduced to the Scientology construct and launched into a machine often referred to as the “E-Meter”, which was made from two cans. The church claims that the electropsychometer system can show adjustments in the emotional state to determine the stored engrams and the “range of non-secular suffering,” each line in the their website.
Stamos said he immediately engaged the system, pretending to have a fake cell phone dialogue.
“I used to do Peabody and Sherman (impressions) and then they didn’t like it,” Stamos said. “Then, I used to be just a king, he said, ‘Get out (and) go.’ He just kicked me out.”
When fellow podcast host Matt Good joked that Stamos was “too annoying” to bother the church, the 61-year-old actor agreed, including, “it’s pretty dangerous, I should have been scared.”
Stamos previously detailed his involvement with the Church of Scientology in his 2023 memoir, If You Have Advised Me.
“I was walking to my car and Mia ran out and grabbed my workbook,” Stamos wrote in the ebook. “‘Hey, you forgot this.’ He provided an additional e-book, the size of a brick, for my stack. ‘Start with this,’ he said, smiling. ‘I think it will open your eyes to some great problems.’
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When Stamos opened his e-book, he said he learned about management and “controlling the reactionary mind, controlling power, controlling the house and controlling time.”
While the e-book initially piqued Stamos’ interest, he says he quickly found the church “creepy as f–k.”
“(One person) began to ask me about committing crimes, asked if I had harmed the idea of ​​Scientology or (founder) L. Ron Hubbard and probed into some questions of unusual intercourse,” Stamos wrote. “The Needle of the Wayback Machine jumps around the corner, and Mia looks uncomfortable. Apparently, I’m not Scientology material. Damn.”
As for the church, they only publicly handle Stamos’ claims.
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