Taylor
2006-04-14 18:19:50 UTC
People Magazine
There goes Tom again... speaking for the both of them and will soon be
speaking for the himself, Katie and the poor baby. Disgusting.
Repulsive. Where's a lobotomy when you need one? The pathetic thing is,
Katie or Nicole or Mimi won't be able to talk about Tom's controlling
ways until _after_ he's dead almost guaranteed a confidentially
agreement and all. God, what a jerk. And tell me _why_ again you people
support his projects (movies)?
---
Tom & Katie: 'We're Just Scientologists'
Friday Apr 14, 2006 8:00am EST
By Stephen M. Silverman
Love and marriage are just two of the topics Tom Cruise touches upon
with Diane Sawyer in an interview scheduled to run Friday night on ABC's
Primetime.
But when it comes down to his 27-year-old pregnant fiancée, the
43-year-old star says, according to excerpts from the Q&A on the ABC Web
site: "We're just a couple that are gonna have a baby and very excited
about it, about this new life."
The child, which is due imminently – Cruise has owned up to knowing the
sex but has not revealed it – will not have a Catholic baptism, despite
Holmes's having been raised a Catholic, says Cruise. Instead, like him,
the baby and new mother will be Scientologists.
"No," Cruise tells Sawyer. "I mean, you can be Catholic and be a
Scientologist. You can be Jewish and be a Scientologist. But we're just
Scientologists."
Cruise dismisses reports that Holmes's religious parents, Martin and
Kathleen Holmes of Ohio, are annoyed by their daughter's shift in faith.
Instead, he says, he's close with "the whole family" and – "absolutely,
yes" – they approve of Scientology, which, according to Cruise, provides
"tools to help better your life. That's what Scientology is. It helps
you to improve your life."
As for improving delivery of the baby through the tenets of Scientology,
Cruise confirms that Holmes will adhere to Scientology's practice of
quiet birth – described by Cruise as a means to "minimize talk and other
noise inside the delivery room" and "basically just respecting the
mother." Addressing speculation that such a practice would deny Holmes
any pain medication should she require it, Cruise says: "She does what
she's gotta do. … If she needs medicine, she needs medicine."
As for what attracted him to Holmes in the first place, Cruise says:
"Her smile drives me crazy in a good way. She has this thing that she
does with her tongue when she smiles. When she's really laughing when
her tongue sticks out … and it's the cutest thing."
But "when we're riding motorcycles," he says, "I tell her look, please
don't stick your tongue out. If we hit a bump or anything I get a little
bit nervous."
He's also charmed by the fact "she loves cupcakes...she loves to laugh,"
he says.
So, why the delay in walking down the aisle? "We were just talking about
it last night," Cruise says. "She has this beautiful belly, this glowing
woman. … We were walking up to bed, and I just, I can't wait till we get
married. I can't wait till I can call and say, 'Hey, you know, put my
wife on the phone.' "
There goes Tom again... speaking for the both of them and will soon be
speaking for the himself, Katie and the poor baby. Disgusting.
Repulsive. Where's a lobotomy when you need one? The pathetic thing is,
Katie or Nicole or Mimi won't be able to talk about Tom's controlling
ways until _after_ he's dead almost guaranteed a confidentially
agreement and all. God, what a jerk. And tell me _why_ again you people
support his projects (movies)?
---
Tom & Katie: 'We're Just Scientologists'
Friday Apr 14, 2006 8:00am EST
By Stephen M. Silverman
Love and marriage are just two of the topics Tom Cruise touches upon
with Diane Sawyer in an interview scheduled to run Friday night on ABC's
Primetime.
But when it comes down to his 27-year-old pregnant fiancée, the
43-year-old star says, according to excerpts from the Q&A on the ABC Web
site: "We're just a couple that are gonna have a baby and very excited
about it, about this new life."
The child, which is due imminently – Cruise has owned up to knowing the
sex but has not revealed it – will not have a Catholic baptism, despite
Holmes's having been raised a Catholic, says Cruise. Instead, like him,
the baby and new mother will be Scientologists.
"No," Cruise tells Sawyer. "I mean, you can be Catholic and be a
Scientologist. You can be Jewish and be a Scientologist. But we're just
Scientologists."
Cruise dismisses reports that Holmes's religious parents, Martin and
Kathleen Holmes of Ohio, are annoyed by their daughter's shift in faith.
Instead, he says, he's close with "the whole family" and – "absolutely,
yes" – they approve of Scientology, which, according to Cruise, provides
"tools to help better your life. That's what Scientology is. It helps
you to improve your life."
As for improving delivery of the baby through the tenets of Scientology,
Cruise confirms that Holmes will adhere to Scientology's practice of
quiet birth – described by Cruise as a means to "minimize talk and other
noise inside the delivery room" and "basically just respecting the
mother." Addressing speculation that such a practice would deny Holmes
any pain medication should she require it, Cruise says: "She does what
she's gotta do. … If she needs medicine, she needs medicine."
As for what attracted him to Holmes in the first place, Cruise says:
"Her smile drives me crazy in a good way. She has this thing that she
does with her tongue when she smiles. When she's really laughing when
her tongue sticks out … and it's the cutest thing."
But "when we're riding motorcycles," he says, "I tell her look, please
don't stick your tongue out. If we hit a bump or anything I get a little
bit nervous."
He's also charmed by the fact "she loves cupcakes...she loves to laugh,"
he says.
So, why the delay in walking down the aisle? "We were just talking about
it last night," Cruise says. "She has this beautiful belly, this glowing
woman. … We were walking up to bed, and I just, I can't wait till we get
married. I can't wait till I can call and say, 'Hey, you know, put my
wife on the phone.' "