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    • Isn't based on a true story

      • Unlike shows like Aquarius, The Path isn't based on a true story or a real cult — but you might forget that it's just a TV show when you're watching it.
      www.bustle.com/articles/150010-is-the-path-based-on-a-true-story-actor-amy-forsyth-explains-why-the-show-feels
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  2. Mar 30, 2016 · When Jessica Goldberg first sat down to create The Path —the hour-long Hulu drama about family members in a fictional cult—she focused first on the core marital couple, played by Aaron Paul and...

    • The Show Revolves Around The Fictional Meyerist Movement.
    • Meyerism Is Not Based on Scientology.
    • Cast Members Really Had to Do Their Research.

    Meyerists believe that if you "look to the light" and climb the rungs of a metaphorical ladder, you will leave behind pain and suffering and avoid the apocalypse when it comes. Dancy's character, Cal, is the acting leader of the movement, while their actual leader Dr. Steven Meyer is away, allegedly finishing writing the final rungs of the ladder. ...

    Sure, there are similarities. Take the "Meyer Machine" for example, which is used by members of the movement to stimulate neurological growth and physical healing. Scientologists have a similar device for spiritual training: The E-Meter. Still, Goldberg said that Scientology wasn't her inspiration. Meyerism is a completely made up faith that she cr...

    Goldberg gave all cast members a guide to study filled with everything and anything related to the fictional faith. Hulu even gave press a similar glossary, chock-full of terms (below). "I read Jessica's bible and I read various things about people who had managed to bring small religious movements into a second generation, because by in large they...

  3. The Path is an American drama television series created by Jessica Goldberg, and starring Aaron Paul, Michelle Monaghan, and Hugh Dancy. The show portrays members of a fictional religion known as Meyerism.

    • Eliana Dockterman
    • Manson Family. Charles Manson led a group that became known as the Manson family on a sort of California commune in the 1960s. He believed in something called “Helter Skelter” (a phrased cribbed from the Beatles song of the same name), which he referred to as an impending race war.
    • Children of God. Founded by David Berg, who in 1977 claimed he was God’s prophet, this Huntington Beach, California cult believed that sex with children was a divine right and condoned sexual abuse.
    • The People’s Temple. The term “drinking the Kool-Aid” originates with the mass suicide of 900 members of The People’s Temple in 1978. The leader of the cult, Jim Jones, began preaching about social equality, lifting up the downtrodden and other socialist principles in the 1960s.
    • Branch Davidians. The Branch Davidians were at the center of the Waco siege in 1993. The group believed that Jesus Christ’s return to earth was imminent.
  4. Jun 21, 2024 · The movie is based on the true story of Jo Ann Foley, whose real-life experience with childhood trauma is recounted in the 1994 book.

  5. Mar 28, 2016 · The movement itself is based on something called Meyerism, named after their first leader, who has had the tenants of their beliefs (called “the ladder”) revealed to him, and to him alone.