A Closer Look at the Real-Life Inspiration in Netflix’s ‘Wayward’


In the hit Netflix series Wayward, the thriller-drama revolving around the inner workings and dark secrets of a fictional school for troubled teenagers, the devil is in the details. The eight-episode limited series traces dual fictional narratives that overlap at a remote institution in a small Vermont town, vividly creating glimpses of the troubling abuse of the teenagers being “treated,” within — and it’s tantamount to torture in many instances. While its primary characters — two wayward high school besties who become trapped at the campus; the institution’s intimidating and enigmatic founder; and a young married couple, one with secrets about the school and the other with ambitions to reveal them  — mostly have the feel of composite versions of the young people sent to these schools or those dealing with the trauma they tend to instill. Yet the series, whether it’s acknowledged officially or not, is filled with details of a very real, notorious institution, the people whose lives were impacted by what was endured and a missing persons case that remains cold after 22 years. 

Wayward creator Mae Martin, who portrays Officer Alex Dempsey in the show, revealed in a recent interview that Wayward’s scripts were drawn from her own real-life experiences — a wayward teen herself, she saw a close friend shipped off to a troubled teen camp. While Martin has not indicated any direct connections, several of the details in her scripts — from the therapeutic tactics down to the Tall Pines Academy logo — either identically mirror or uncannily resemble the people who attended and events that occurred at CEDU, one of the most notorious troubled teen facilities in the nation’s history. CEDU was shuttered decades ago amid a flurry of lawsuits, and like the Wayward’s fictional institution, it was rampant with brutality, cruelty and had multiple residents disappear under strange circumstances in cases that local police have all but abandoned. 

For many, CEDU is considered ground zero for the now multi-billion dollar troubled teen industry but the organization and its institutions have a dark history of emotional, physical and psychological abuse. It operated at multiple locations from 1967 until its closure in 2005, leaving behind a legacy of abuse with impunity that occurred within a cult-like environment and was based on degradation and stripping the identity from teenagers, who’d been sent there for reasons extending to drug addiction to teenage depression.

Desperate Escapes 

Wayward opens with a smashed window and a heart-pounding chase as a mysterious teenage boy desperately flees his Tall Pines Academy dorm and then the walls of the campus and into the unforgiving woods. Meanwhile, the school’s security team flips the floodlights on and comes after the runaway with all of the institution’s power. That escape experience may be heightened for dramatic impact, but it’s easy to presume that a similar terror was most certainly felt by hundreds of teenagers trying to escape the camps or institutions where many were kidnapped at their parents’ instructions and taken against their will. 

This was a consistent issue over the 40 years CEDU existed as a law-flouting, minor-endangering alternative for parents. The unknown levels of abuse were quite real for the hundreds who had attempted to flee, like the teen in Wayward’s opening moments, out of total desperation. 

Close Ties With Local Police

Wayward paints a close and corrupt relationship between law enforcement in Tall Pines — a town full of secrets — and the institution that brings money and young blood into the community. Tall Pines Academy’s founder and cult-leader-like headmistress “likes to be involved,” as Alex is told on day one at the local police force; he is also informed after a run-in with the desperate Tall Pines runaway (whose escape opens the series) that this happens all of the time and police often must bring them back to campus. CEDU’s San Bernadeno campus had a similar relationship with the city’s sheriff’s office. According to an investigation in Los Angeles Magazine, out of 415 reports of program-fleeing juveniles from CEDU’s San Bernardino location over eight years, local law enforcement logged only 10 “attempts to locate” and four search and rescue missions. The L.A. Mag report also indicates that the sheriff’s office consistently stonewalled their investigation into the death of a missing teenager, Daniel Yuen. 

Daniel Goes Missing — or Does He?

One of the many character-driven plot threads in Wayward involved a character named Daniel, a conniving young man who is one of a handful of the series’ characters who don’t live to appear in the eighth and final episode. Daniel’s death (spoiler alert: he is stabbed by a fellow student) is covered up when he’s said to have run away. At CEDU, a supposed runaway existed in real life: Daniel Yuen. L.A. Mag’s investigation reveals that many details emerged about the day of the teenager’s alleged escape. One that resonates, though, is an account by an unnamed source that Daniel had been disciplined for trying to flee, restrained by a young counselor “until a CEDU staff member arrived to take control.” Twenty-two years later, his parents, having searched far and wide for their son — sometimes even aided by former CEDU staffers whom they were paying — have had no luck; Daniel Yuen is still missing. 

Group therapy in episode 103 of Wayward.

Netflix

The Synanon Connection

With her long coat and oversized glasses, and dead-on stare, Toni Colette’s central Wayward character gives off the uncomfortable feeling of a cult leader. So it’s not surprising to see that in a recent interview about the show, Martin revealed that her inspiration for Colette’s Evelyn Wade was the Synanon cult, once called the “most dangerous and violent cults America had ever seen.”

“In researching these schools — a lot of which are now being talked about in different documentaries — I learned about Synanon,” Martin said in the interview, per Esquire. “That was a self-help cult in the ’70s in L.A., which was ultimately shut down, but it kind of transformed and was part of the beginnings of the ‘troubled teen’ industry. So we took those facts and then dialed them up a bunch.”

One aspect included in the series is “The Synanon Game,” a group attack therapy dreamed up within the cult where members humiliated one another and encouraged the exposure of one another’s innermost weaknesses. This is directly lifted and placed into Wayward with the “Hot Seat” therapy session that the students endure. Following his time with Synanon, Charles DIetrich founded CEDU Educational Services, Inc. in 1967; “The Synanon Game” was adapted into hours-long emotional growth sessions called “raps,” where students were incentivized to “indict” their classmates for rule infractions and lay into their shame by screaming “disclosures” about them to the group. After this, at night, “smooshing” would soothe the pain felt in these sessions — as displayed in a form on Wayward. This is a form of group touching involving hugging, caressing, hair stroking and lap-sitting.   

Mae Martin as Alex Dempsey and Mark McKinney as Maurice in episode 105 of Wayward.

Netflix

One Good Cop

In Wayward, deputy Alex discovers that multiple teens have gone missing from the Academy and does a quick online search and discovers an activist and investigative blogger named Maurice, an unhinged man who is working to expose the dark truth about Tall Pines Academy. After the two meet, their potentially fruitful partnership veers into mistrust and meets a violent end. In San Bernadeno, as the investigation into some of CEDU’s missing kids was reopened, a remarkably similar meeting played out, according to David Safran, a CEDU survivor who has become involved in multiple media projects on the troubled teen industry and CEDU’s missing kids. 

“In real life, that happened exactly like that,” Safran told The Hollywood Reporter, referring to the outreach he received from Detective Alisha Rosa in November 2021. “It wasn’t Vermont. It was a newly-promoted California detective who was transferred to the remote 20 station in the San Bernardino Mountains. She discovered multiple kids had gone missing from CEDU and quickly found my blog post on Medium and reached out to me. It really became the story of an intrepid cop and a citizen journalist connecting on how to find out what happens to these kids.”

Despite some key differences in the fictional Maurice’s backstory (he’s a parent of a missing kid, not, as Safran is, a former pupil of the institution) and their demeanors (Safran does not give raving madman), Safran notes other striking similarities between Maurice’s experience on the show and his own. One notable moment came in the scene where Wayward’s local sleuth tells Alex that he has heard nothing but radio silence from every media outlet that he has contacted about exposing Tall Pines Academy; this was Safran’s experience when contacting outlets about the CEDU missing persons cases, including that of Daniel Yuen. Finally, both Maurice and Safran were skeptical of a still green detective attempting to take on a massive, entrenched institution like CEDU or the fictional Tall Pines Academy. Safran told THR that this shifted with time and that the real story with Detective Rosa came later, when she was taken off the revived CEDU missing kids case in a rug-pull by her superiors as her investigation, aided by Safran, was progressing. 

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With her series now a major hit, having shot to No. 1 on the Netflix Top 10 chart in its first week on the platform and remained in the top 10 since, it seems within the realm of possibility that Martin may be asked to bring the limited, one-and-done series back. Whether a potential second season would delve further into what life was like at CEDU — or focus on or even acknowledge the connections to actual events — the institution is now the central mystery for Wayward. But for survivors like Safran, many of whom have expressed their opinions on the series online, the show is commendable for shining a light on the dark tactics found in corners of the troubled teen industry and for buoying the conversation about these horrors — that can be deeply traumatizing and linger for a lifetime — but could also lean into the reality of its depictions of life there. And be clear with its audience: Wayward is fiction but plenty of what is seen is based in fact. This is real, and is still happening. 

“It’s just not the day-to-day counter therapeutic techniques, all that kind of stuff is similar, but not. It’s not authentic to the experience. They know the historical record, they know the lingo, they know the cult stuff,” Safran says of Wayward’s notable lack of acknowledgment of how fact-based it is. “Reality in the troubled teen industry is always darker and funnier and weirder.”

Netflix was contacted by The Hollywood Reporter to seek comment on the above connections, but did not immediately reply. This story will be updated with any response from the streamer.


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