Jun 12, 2026
Research Participants: Do you have or have you ever been in a relationship?
ICSA CONFERENCE 2026 Workshop: Reflecting is creating: Using the expressive arts to share and connect
WORKSHOP: Former members workshop
CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/12/2026
New Docuseries
Variety: ‘Bring Me the Beauties’: Inside the Doomsday Alien Sex Cult That Ensnared the First Male Supermodel
The Variety article provides an overview of "Bring Me the Beauties," a three-part HBO docuseries directed by veteran filmmaker Chris Smith (Fyre, Bad Vegan). The series exposes Eternal Values, a bizarre doomsday "alien sex cult" that operated during the pre-Internet era of the late 1970s and 1980s.
At the center of the story is Hoyt Richards, who was a Princeton football recruit before becoming the world's first male supermodel, working for top fashion houses like Versace and Ralph Lauren. While Richards was raking in millions, almost all of his earnings were secretly funding the cult.
Here are the key takeaways from the article:
The Leader and the Hook
The "Talented Mr. Ripley" Figure: The cult was led by a charismatic New York socialite named Frederick Von Mierers. In reality, he was Freddy Miers—a working-class kid from Brooklyn who fabricated a high-society backstory to climb the social ladder.
The Cosmic Backstory: Von Mierers claimed that an alien from the star Arcturus had entered his body. He told his followers he had ten years to train other "Arcturians" to survive an apocalyptic "pole shift" predicted for 1999. They believed they would be rescued by UFOs and placed in rejuvenation chambers.
Targeting "Beauties": In 1978, Von Mierers approached a 16-year-old Richards on a beach. He used his access to exclusive high-society spaces like Studio 54 to lure young, attractive people into his orbit, moving them into his East 54th Street apartment under the guise of helping them become more "evolved."
Cult Life and Financial Exploitation
Control Tactics: Followers were subjected to intense psychological "life readings" based on astrology charts that preyed on their insecurities. They were forced to buy expensive "healing" gemstones, follow strict fruit-and-vegetable diets, endure mandatory tanning sessions, and completely disown their families.
The UFO Business Empire: Von Mierers turned the cult into a highly lucrative corporate entity called Ultimate Fitness Opportunities (UFO), selling supplements, exercise gear, and costly astrology readings.
Funding the Compound: Hoyt Richards estimated that he poured millions of his modeling earnings into the cult. Much of this money was used to purchase a lake compound in Lake Lure, North Carolina, which was designated as the ideal UFO landing spot.
The Dark Turn and Downfall
Violence and Abuse: Over time, the environment became increasingly abusive. Members were forced to "watchdog" one another. Rules were enforced through "slamming sessions" (vicious verbal berating), physical violence, and food/water deprivation.
The Sex Rings: Despite teaching his followers that romantic love and sex were "the downfall of mankind," Von Mierers forced members to take ecstasy and engage in incestuous sex with each other or strangers. Furthermore, his assistant revealed that followers were forced to hire male gigolos from places like Times Square to pleasure Von Mierers multiple times a week.
The Collapse: Following an embarrassing appearance on The Richard Bey Show and a damning 1990 Vanity Fair exposé titled "The Ford Models and the Alien from Arcturus," the cult began to unravel. Von Mierers died of AIDS just five days before the article hit newsstands.
The Armed Aftermath: Following his death, a power struggle ensued. The remaining members retreated to the North Carolina compound, hoarding gold, silver, and massive stockpiles of weapons in anticipation of the 1999 cataclysm.
Richards' Escape
Richards eventually broke free after falling in love with a woman named Donna. When the cult tried to punish him for entering a romantic relationship by shaving his head, forcing him to do menial labor, and making him quit modeling, he escaped. He returned to his biological family and spent his mother's final years serving as her primary caregiver while she battled cancer, using the time to reconnect and prove he was finally back.
New Video
Yes Theory: 100 Hours in America's Strange "Cult City"
This video follows Yes Theory hosts Thomas Brag and Staffan Taylor as they spend 100 hours in Fairfield, Iowa, a city known for its large community of Transcendental Meditation (TM) practitioners. Arriving without a plan, the hosts aim to objectively explore whether the community functions as a supportive, peaceful "paradise" or an insular "cult."
Throughout their four-day immersion, they:
Participate in a formal TM course: They are initiated into the practice, learn a personal mantra, and experience group meditation techniques.
Engage with the community: They meet long-time practitioners, including their teacher, Wall-E, and the president of the Maharishi University, to understand the movement's philosophy of stress reduction and consciousness.
Explore local culture: They experience the town's unique, creative side, including an immersive "art house" installation and local sound-healing events.
Ultimately, the hosts reflect on their experience, noting that while they encountered no evidence of a cult-like environment during their visit, they remain aware of the critical external perspectives surrounding the organization. They conclude that the meditation technique itself has become a positive, lasting tool in their daily lives.
New Podcasts
Vox: Unexplainable: Lost on the Road to Enlightenment
"So many of us have been told that meditation can make us less stressed, more productive, and happier. But for a small group of people, it has a dark side. What's going on?"
Check out this podcast from Vox with Willoughby Britton from Cheetah House and Richie Davidson.
AI Research Disclosure: To bring you the most relevant stories, parts of this newsletter utilize artificial intelligence (AI) tools to search the web, source articles, and assist with content curation. This content is for informational purposes only; we recommend verifying critical facts independently.
News, Education, Intervention, Recovery
Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.
CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.
CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources about: cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.
The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan, Joseph Kelly or Ashlen Hilliard endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.
Research Participation Opportunity:Religious Harm: Insights from Mental Health Practitioners
Jun 11, 2026
Group Profile: Da Free John
Evolution of Names
Before and after using "Da Free John," Jones adopted several different titles, including:
- Bubba Free John (1970s): "Bubba" represents a friendly, brotherly figure.
- Da Free John (1970s–1980s): Shifting toward a more traditional guru persona ("Da" meaning "giver").
- Avabhasa (1990s)
- Adi Da Samraj (Late 1990s until his death in 2008)
Core Teachings and Philosophy
- Jones’s early teachings focused on a radical critique of traditional seeking. He argued that spiritual seekers are caught in a trap of "self-contraction"—constantly trying to achieve a future state of enlightenment, which inherently prevents them from recognizing that reality is already inherently free and divine.
His primary philosophy centered on:
- The Way of the Heart: A path based on devotion to him as a living avatar.
- Divine Distraction: Engaging in spiritual practices that turn attention away from the ego and toward the divine reality he claimed to embody.
- Radical Understanding: Direct, immediate insight into the nature of consciousness without relying on progressive spiritual steps or techniques.
Controversies and Criticism
While initially praised by some prominent figures in the Western spiritual and psychological communities (such as Ken Wilber and Alan Watts) for his incisive, sophisticated texts on non-duality, his movement soon attracted severe criticism.
- Authoritarian Dynamics: Critics and former members described the group as a high-demand, insular organization that practiced extreme psychological control over its adherents.
- Exploitation: In the mid-1980s, lawsuits and public allegations emerged from former followers detailing emotional abuse, financial exploitation, and manipulative sexual practices orchestrated by Jones within his inner circle.
- Isolation: Jones spent much of his later life in relative isolation on the island of Naitauba in Fiji, commanding total devotion from a deeply committed, but significantly smaller, group of followers.
Legacy
Today, the community of Adidam continues to preserve and publish his voluminous writings, maintaining his sanctuary in Fiji and a handful of spiritual centers globally. Outside of his formal followers, he is widely studied by sociologists, researchers, and religious historians as a prominent example of a charismatic leader whose movement exhibited classic authoritarian and abusive dynamics.
Not just about sex: Forced labor and the economics of cultic control, Carol Merchasin
CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/11/2026
New DocuseriesDaily Mail: The Cult Behind The Killer: The Andrea Yates Story
"This shocking true-crime documentary tells the story of Texas-born Andrea Kennedy, who was working as a nurse at a cancer hospital when she met Russell ‘Rusty’ Yates. After the pair were married, they began having children (more swiftly than they expected).
Noah came along first, in 1994, then John, then Paul, then Luke in 1999 - and it was a few months after Luke was born that Rusty remembers his wife starting to change, to withdraw and stare blankly into space. They had another child, though, and it was after the birth of Mary in 2000 that Andrea turned into a ‘completely different person’.
In 2001, she drowned all five children in the bath. This three-parter hears the story directly from Rusty, exploring the role of postnatal depression, schizophrenia, and the belief system taught by preacher Michael Woroniecki in the heartbreaking fate of the children." (Three episodes HBO Max, Discovery+)
Research & AcademicLa Brújula Verde: Findings in a Mithras Sanctuary in Croatia Force a Rethink of How This Roman Cult Was Practiced
The La Brújula Verde article details a recent study published in the Journal of Roman Archaeology by researchers Ian S. Wilson (Harvard) and Matthew McCarty (University of British Columbia). Their 3D photogrammetric analysis of the Močići site near Cavtat, Croatia, strongly challenges the long-held belief that the Roman cult of Mithras was uniformly practiced across the empire.
• The Gloriavale Christian Community is a secretive group located in New Zealand
• Members of the cult have been accused of sexual abuse
• Gloriavale is the subject of the new Paramount+ documentary, Devotion: Obedience or Betrayal
AI Research Disclosure: To bring you the most relevant stories, parts of this newsletter utilize artificial intelligence (AI) tools to search the web, source articles, and assist with content curation. This content is for informational purposes only; we recommend verifying critical facts independently.
News, Education, Intervention, Recovery
Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.
CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.
CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources about: cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.
The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan, Joseph Kelly or Ashlen Hilliard endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.
Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.
Jun 10, 2026
ICSA International Conference 2026
Traumatic Narcissism: Thirty years of research and practical information for survivor recovery
CultNEWS101 Articles: 6/10/2026
New DocuseriesTime: The True Story Behind Bring Me the Beauties and the Eternal Values Cult
Cult recovery advocates are praising the series for its deep look into susceptibility, proving that even highly successful, wealthy, and intelligent individuals can be systematically isolated through psychological pressure, public shaming, and charismatic manipulation.
Yahoo: Who Was Frederick von Mierers? All About the ‘Bring Me the Beauties’ Cult Leader
"Frederick von Mierers was an extraterrestrial reincarnated from the giant star Arcturus—or at least that’s what he told followers. The Manhattan socialite was the leader of Eternal Values, a doomsday UFO-centered cult composed of high-fashion models.
Von Mierers, who founded the cult in the 1980s, lured in top modeling professionals with his peculiar brand of new-age mysticism and used his spiritual authority to exploit his devotees financially.
His influence is explored in the new HBO documentary series Bring Me the Beauties: A Model Cult, which includes extensive interviews with his most prominent former follower, supermodel Hoyt Richards.
Here’s what you should know about Frederick von Mierers."
A 24-year-old artificial-intelligence researcher has pleaded not guilty to charges of cutting the throat of an 82-year-old man in January 2025. The young man was part of a loose network called the Zizians: self-proclaimed rationalists who believe a misaligned AI superintelligence could one day torture humanity the way factory farms torture animals.
They believe direct action is required to stop the descent of this AI judgment. The group is linked to six violent deaths in California, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. Multiple Zizian trials are pending, and federal prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in one case.
The Zizians haven’t labeled their own activity AI worship, but they’ve organized themselves around the practice. The Zizians are convinced that a coming superintelligence will decide the fate of every living thing and that violence now is justified to shape what that AI will become.
This is what the first AI-centered extremist movement in America looks like. It won’t be the last. New religions are forming around artificial intelligence, and the focus of their worship is the large language model itself—a piece of software treated as a personal deity.
News, Education, Intervention, Recovery
Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.
CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families in making the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.
CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources about: cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.
The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan, Joseph Kelly, or Ashlen Hilliard endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.
Cults in the News: Recent Stories Drawing Public Attention
Eternal Values: Apocalyptic Beliefs Revisited
One of the most discussed stories involves Eternal Values, a New Age movement led by a figure who claimed to be an extraterrestrial being from Arcturus. Recent reporting and documentary coverage have examined how followers were persuaded to relocate and prepare for an anticipated apocalypse. Former members have shared their experiences, providing insight into how charismatic leadership and apocalyptic messaging can influence group behavior.
Gloriavale Under Renewed Scrutiny
The isolated Christian community of Gloriavale in New Zealand is receiving renewed attention through a documentary that explores allegations of abuse, strict social control, and the challenges faced by former members who have left the community. The story continues to raise broader questions about authority, accountability, and individual freedom within closed religious groups.
Heaven's Gate Returns to Public Discussion
The infamous Heaven's Gate movement is once again making headlines due to the release of the film The Leader, which focuses on co-founder Bonnie Nettles. The renewed attention has prompted discussions about the group's beliefs, recruitment methods, and the tragic mass suicide of 39 members in 1997. The story remains one of the most widely studied examples of a destructive cult in modern American history.
Scientology and Public Curiosity
Recent news coverage involving social media personalities entering Scientology facilities has reignited public discussion about the Church of Scientology. While the incidents themselves are not directly related to the organization's teachings, they have generated renewed interest in Scientology's history, practices, and ongoing controversies.
Ongoing Investigations of Alleged Cult-Like Groups
Law enforcement investigations and court proceedings involving several alleged cult-like organizations continue to receive media attention. These cases often involve allegations of coercive control, financial exploitation, or abuse. While outcomes vary and allegations remain subject to legal review, such stories contribute to ongoing public conversations about how high-control groups operate and how authorities respond.
Understanding the Term "Cult"
The term "cult" remains controversial. Scholars often prefer terms such as "high-control group" or "new religious movement," while critics use "cult" to describe organizations that exert significant psychological, social, or financial control over members. As a result, the label is frequently debated, and readers are encouraged to evaluate each case based on documented behaviors and evidence rather than terminology alone.
References
People Magazine. "Cult Leader Who Claimed to Be an Alien Moved His Followers to House in North Carolina to Escape 'Apocalypse'."
People Magazine. "Inside New Zealand's Gloriavale Cult."
People Magazine. "Vera Farmiga on Playing Heaven's Gate Founder Bonnie Nettles in The Leader."
Vanity Fair. "UFOs, Sex Bans, and a Mass Suicide: Inside the Sinister Heaven's Gate Cult."
The Guardian. Coverage of recent Scientology-related incidents and public reactions.
