^ I ultimately respect whatever way someone wants to do this. I'd rather entheogens be accessible in a number of ways and formats. I'm just saying that the "cultural experience" doesn't work for me. I've travelled the world and I know multiple languages - not meaning to brag, just saying - and it seems like it's always westerners who are trying to appropriate another culture's way of doing things instead of being creative and inventing their own process. I've been to South America as well, and I've heard different shamanic chants before. No way in hell would I want to hear a shaman chanting into my ear while I'm tripping balls. I'd rather play some soothing electronica and have a good friend as a sitter.
Watched the doc posted above... seemed like a glorified advertisement to me. And from the clips, it does not seem that "pure" of a culture experience anyway. Doing yoga and a raw food diet seems pretty western; so is building a shrine with icons from all over the world. "Terra Vida" is well known in my area and IMO it's just an expensive getaway. I've been to jungles and they are not my cup of tea. I guess some people are just looking for a package experience. I'm on the west coast and I've met enough people who've done ayahuasca the traditional way to know that there is major koolaid involved. I'm looking for an introspective experience, not brainwashing. Some of these groups even insist on a medical intake process, and a bunch of other koolaid hoops to jump through, before they decide if you are worthy.
Meanwhile, I just bought caapi, viridis, and mimosa on my own, and I am taking them separately in micro doses to experience the essence of the plants. These koolaid shamanic groups would never let you touch their "sacred medicine" in this way; not until the time of the ceremony when I receive some unknown dose that THEY decide for me, without me even having a chance to micro-dose in advance and experiment with tolerance levels.
Let's be realistic though... as illustrated in the video above, these plants are plentiful and grow wild in South America. You can walk along and pick it off trees. It's why I don't take this whole manufacturing process for the western world very seriously. I respect the ayahuascueros and their tradition, but I am not a member of their lineage or culture so doing it in that context doesn't hold meaning for me. And frankly, the less human ego the better.