Metadata from InDesign to PDF via PostScript

Have been playing around with placing Metadata in a InDesign CS4 file and then outputting a PostScript file.  Then Distill the PS file into a PDF.  ( seems silly but it is a customer requirement )
When I check the PDF the metadata is gone.  When I check the PostScript file I see the placeholders for metadata, just no metadata. 
Any suggestions for how to prepare the PostScript file ?
Thanks

Steve Werner wrote:
Metadata (along with color management profiles, tagging, and many other things) are lost when you make a PostScript file, then use Distiller. The PostScript format predates all of these things are was never prepared to preserve them. That's why creating PDF in a different way is essential.
That's not entirely fair. PostScript certainly predates the PDF metadata structuring, however when PDF was introduced, Adobe extended PostScript to define a way to include PDF data in PostScript files (pdfmark; though I want to say there's another way as well). There's no reason that InDesign's Postscript export couldn't or shouldn't support inclusion of simple metadata in PostScript output (XMP metadata, on the other hand, I don't know if there's a good way to include such that Distiller would pick it up).
Of course, it would be possible to extract the metadata from the InDesign file seperately and shove it into the extracted PostScript file prior to distilling,  or shove it in to the produced PDF file after distilling. Just a simple matter of scripting.
Dov wrote:
Very irrational and truly unnecessary customer requirement!
Dov, I feel like you are being a little disingenuous here to make a political point. As many have observed, often distilling InDesign's postscript produces more compact PDF files than any reasonable direct PDF output setting from InDesign. That makes it legitimately attractive to some people who care a lot about minimizing file size while maximizing quality. It is diffficult to tell them they are wrong.
I guess I haven't looked closely at this question, but it seems like this disfavored workflow does have some clear advantages. (I don't use such a workflow, so, take that with some salt.)

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