Deconstructing The Dead
Cross Over One Last Time To Expose Medium John Edward
By Michael Shermer
From: http://www.skeptic.com
History is not just one damn thing after another, it is
also the same damn thing over and over--time's arrow and
time's cycle. Fads come and go, in clothing, cars, and
psychics. In the 1970s it was Uri Geller, in the 1980s
it was Shirley MacLaine, in the 1990s it was James Van
Praagh, and to kick off the new millennium it is John Edward.
Edward's star is rising rapidly with a hit daily television
series "Crossing Over" on the Sci Fi network
and a New York Times bestselling book "One Last Time." He
has appeared, unopposed, on Larry King Live and has been
featured on Dateline, Entertainment Tonight, and an HBO
special.
Last year, Skeptic magazine was the first national publication
to run an expose of John Edward in James "The Amazing" Randi's
column (in Vol. 8, #3, available here at www.skeptic.com),
a story that was picked up this week by Time magazine,
who featured a full-page article on what is rapidly becoming
the Edward phenomenon. There is, in reality, nothing new
here. Same story, different names. In watching Edward I'm
amazed at how blatant he is in stealing lines from medium
James Van Praagh. It reminds me of entertainers, commedians,
and magicians who go to each others' shows to glean new
ideas.
Time's reporter Leon Jaroff, quoting from the Skeptic
article, wrote a skeptical piece in which he reported the
experiences of an audience member from an Edward taping.
His name is Michael O'Neill, a New York City marketing
manager, who reported his experiences as follows (quoting
from the Skeptic article):
"I was on the John Edward show. He even had a multiple
guess "hit" on me that was featured on the show.
However, it was edited so that my answer to another question
was edited in after one of his questions. In other words,
his question and my answer were deliberately mismatched.
Only a fraction of what went on in the studio was actually
seen in the final 30 minute show. He was wrong about a
lot and was very aggressive when somebody failed to acknowledge
something he said. Also, his "production assistants" were
always around while we waited to get into the studio. They
told us to keep very quiet, and they overheard a lot. I
think that the whole place is bugged somehow. Also, once
in the studio we had to wait around for almost two hours
before the show began. Throughout that time everybody was
talking about what dead relative of theirs might pop up.
Remember that all this occurred under microphones and with
cameras already set up. My guess is that he was backstage
listening and looking at us all and noting certain readings.
When he finally appeared, he looked at the audience as
if he were trying to spot people he recognized. He also
had ringers in the audience. I can tell because about fifteen
people arrived in a chartered van, and once inside they
did not sit together."
Later, an ABC television producer flew out from New York
to film me for an investigation of Edward they are conducting.
The segment began as a "puff piece" (as she called
it), but a chance encounter in the ABC cafeteria with 20/20
correspondent Bill Ritter, with whom I worked on an expose
of medium James Van Praagh a few years ago, tipped her
off that Edward was, in fact, a Van Praagh clone and that
his talking to the dead was nothing more than the old magicians'
cold reading trick. After waching the 20/20 piece the producer
immediately realized what was really going on inside Edward's
studio. She began to ask a few probing questions and was
promptly cut off by Edward and his producers. ABC was told
they would not be allowed to film inside the studio and
that they, the Sci Fi network, would provide edited clips
that ABC could use. The ABC producer became suspicious,
and then skeptical. She has been trying to get an interview
with Edward to confront him with my critiques, but they
continue to put her off. In fact, she later phoned to tell
me that Edward's publicist just left a message on her voice
mail (with a date and time) stating that Edward was not
available for an interview because he is out of state,
yet the producer just caught him on television live in
studio on CBS New York! Something fishy is going on here
and I know what it is.
The video clips I was shown makes it obvious why Edward
does not want raw footage going out to the public--he's
not all that good at doing cold readings. Where I estimated
Van Praagh's hit rate at between 20-30 percent, Edward's
hit rate at between 10-20 percent (the error-range in the
estimates is created by the fuzziness of what constitutes
a "hit"--more on this in a moment). The advantage
Edward has over Van Praagh is his verbal alacrity. Van
Praagh is Ferrari fast, but Edward is driving an Indy-500
racer. In the opening minute of the first reading captured
on film by the ABC camera, I counted over one statement
per second (ABC was allowed to film in the control room
under the guise of filming the hardworking staff, and instead
filmed Edward on the monitor in the raw). Think about that--in
one minute Edward riffles through 60 names, dates, colors,
diseases, conditions, situations, relatives, and the like.
It goes so fast that you have to stop tape, rewind, and
go back to catch them all. When he does come up for air
the studio audience members to whom he is speaking look
like deer in the headlights. In the edited tape provided
by Edward we caught a number of editing mistakes, where
he appears to be starting a reading on someone but makes
reference to something they said "earlier." Oops!
Edward begins by selecting a section of the studio audience
of about 20 people, saying things like "I'm getting
a George over here. I don't know what this means. George
could be someone who passed over, he could be someone here,
he could be someone that you know," etc. Of course
such generalizations lead to a "hit" where someone
indeed knows a George, or is related to a George, or is
a George. Now that he's targeted his mark, the real reading
begins in which Edward employs cold reading, warm reading,
and hot reading techniques.
1. Cold Reading. The first thing to know is that John
Edward, like all other psychic mediums, does not do the
reading--his subjects do. He asks them questions and they
give him answers. "I'm getting a P name. Who is this
please?" "He's showing me something red. What
is this please?" And so on. This is what is known
in the mentalism trade as cold reading, where you literally "read" someone "cold," knowing
nothing about them. You ask lots of questions and make
numerous statements, some general and some specific, and
sees what sticks. Most of the time Edward is wrong. If
the subjects have time they visibly nod their heads "no." But
Edward is so fast that they usually only have the time
or impetus to acknowledge the hits. And Edward only needs
an occasional strike to convince his clientele he is genuine.
2. Warm Reading. This is utilizing known principles of
psychology that apply to nearly everyone. For example,
most grieving people will wear a piece of jewelry that
has a connection to their loved one. Katie Couric on The
Today Show, for example, after her husband died, wore his
ring on a necklace when she returned to the show. Edward
knows this about mourning people and will say something
like "do you have a ring or a piece of jewelry on
you, please?" His subject cannot believe her ears
and nods enthusiastically in the affirmative. He says "thank
you," and moves on as if he had just divined this
from heaven. Most people also keep a photograph of their
loved one either on them or near their bed, and Edward
will take credit for this specific hit that actually applies
to most people.
Edward is facile at determining the cause of death by
focusing either on the chest or head areas, and then exploring
whether it was a slow or sudden end. He works his way down
through these possibilities as if he were following a computer
flow chart and then fills in the blanks. "I'm feeling
a pain in the chest." If he gets a positive nod, he
continues. "Did he have cancer, please? Because I'm
seeing a slow death here." If he gets the nod, he
takes the hit. If the subject hesitates at all, he will
quickly shift to heart attack. If it is the head, he goes
for stroke or head injury from an automobile accident or
fall. Statistically speaking there are only half a dozen
ways most of us die, so with just a little probing, and
the verbal and nonverbal cues of his subject, he can appear
to get far more hits than he is really getting.
3. Hot Reading. Sometimes psychic mediums cheat by obtaining
information on a subject ahead of time. I do not know if
Edward does research or uses shills in the audience to
get information on people, or even plants in the audience
on which to do readings, but in my investigation of James
Van Praagh I discovered from numerous television producers
that he consciously and deliberately pumps them for information
about his subjects ahead of time, then uses that information
to deceive the viewing public that he got it from heaven.
The ABC producer also asked me to do a reading on her. "You
know absolutely nothing about me so let's see how well
this works." After reviewing the Edward tapes I did
a ten minute reading on her. She sat there dropped jawed
and wide eyed, counting my hits. She proclaimed that I
was unbelievably accurate. How did I do it? Let's just
say I utilized all three of the above techniques.
Most of the time, however, mediums do not need to cheat.
The reason has to do with the psychology of belief. This
stuff works because the people who go to mediums want it
to work (remember, they do the readings, not the mediums).
The simplest explanation for how mediums can get away with
such an outrageous claim as the ability to talk to the
dead is that they are dealing with a subject the likes
of which it would be hard to top for tragedy and finality--death.
Sooner or later we all will face this inevitability, starting,
in the normal course of events, with the loss of our parents,
then siblings and friends, and eventually ourselves. It
is a grim outcome under the best of circumstances, made
all the worse when death comes early or accidentally to
those whose "time was not up." As those who traffic
in the business of loss, death, and grief know all too
well, we are often at our most vulnerable at such times.
Giving deep thought to this reality can cause the most
controlled and rational among us to succumb to our emotions.
The reason John Edward, James Van Praagh, and the other
so-called mediums are unethical and dangerous is that they
are not helping anyone in what they are doing. They are
simply preying on the emotions of grieving people. As all
loss, death, and grief counselors know, the best way to
deal with death is to face it head on. Death is a part
of life, and pretending that the dead are gathering in
a television studio in New York to talk twaddle with a
former ballroom-dance instructor is an insult to the intelligence
and humanity of the living.
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