Photograph of James Randi.
James Randi

Overview

James Randi (born August 7, 1928), stage name The Amazing Randi, is a stage magician and scientific skeptic best known as a challenger of paranormal claims and pseudoscience. Born Randall James Hamilton Zwinge, in Toronto, Canada, Randi is the founder of the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF).

The JREF sponsors the famous million dollar challenge offering a prize of US $1,000,000 to anyone who can demonstrate evidence of any paranormal, supernatural or occult power or event, under test conditions agreed to by both parties. He was a regular guest on the The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, and is occasionally featured on the television program Penn & Teller: Bullshit!.

Early and personal life

Randi is the oldest of three children born to a Bell Canada employee. He took up magic after reading magic books while spending 13 months in a body cast after a bicycle accident. The doctors expected Randi would never walk again, but he did.

In the 1960's, Randi worked in Philippine night clubs before Ferdinand Marcos and wife Imelda Marcos were in power.

Randi witnessed many tricks that were presented as being supernatural. One of his earliest reported experiences is that of seeing an evangelist using the "one-ahead" routine to convince churchgoers of his divine powers.

Randi for many years has been an amateur astronomer, influenced by his friend Carl Sagan. In 1981 asteroid 3163 Randi was named after Randi.

In 1987, Randi became a naturalized citizen of the United States. Randi said that one reason for becoming an American citizen was a Canadian police search he experienced while on tour with Alice Cooper.

In February of 2006, Randi underwent coronary artery bypass surgery. In early February 2006, he was declared to be in stable condition and "receiving excellent care" with his recovery proceeding well. The weekly commentary updates to his website were made by guests while he was hospitalized. Randi is doing well since his surgery, and was well enough to help organize and attend the 2007 Amazing Meeting in Las Vegas, NV (an annual convention of scientists, magicians, skeptics, atheists, and other freethinkers).

Background

Randi began his career as a magician, but then became a debunker of the paranormal. Then he expanded into writing about the paranormal, skepticism, the history of magic, became a biographer of Houdini, and even wrote a children's book.
Career as a magician
Randi has worked as a professional stage magician and escapologist since 1946, initially under his birth name, Randall Zwinge. Early in his career, Randi was part of numerous stunts involving his escape from jail cells and safes. On February 7 1956, he appeared live on The Today Show and remained in a sealed metal coffin submerged in a hotel swimming pool for 104 minutes, breaking what was said to be Houdini's record of 93 minutes.

Randi was the host of The Amazing Randi Show on New York radio station WOR-Radio in the mid-1960s. He also hosted numerous television specials and went on several world tours. Then Randi appeared as "The Amazing Randi" on a television show entitled Wonderama from 1967 to 1972. "Sonny Fox hosted another 'Wonderama Thanksgiving Day Party' on Thursday afternoon, November 23, 1961 with guests ventriloquist and cartoon voice-over performer Paul Winchell, magician/escape artist and magic historian The Amazing James Randi and folk singer Pat Woodell." http://www.randi.org/tam3/</bgref> In the February 2, 1974 issue of Abracadabra (a British conjuring magazine), Randi defined the magic community saying, "I know of no calling which depends so much upon mutual trust and faith as does ours." In the December 2003 issue of the The Linking Ring, the monthly publication of The International Brotherhood of Magicians, Points to Ponder: Another Matter of Ethics, p. 97, it is stated, "Perhaps Randi's ethics are what make him Amazing" and "The Amazing Randi not only talks the talk, he walks the walk."

During Alice Cooper's 1974 tour, Randi performed as the dentist and executioner on stage. Also, Randi had designed and built several of the stage props, including the guillotine. An incident where the Royal Canadian Mounted Police searched the band's lockers during a performance has been cited by Randi as leading him to apply for American citizenship. Shortly after, in February 1975, Randi escaped from a straitjacket while suspended upside-down over Niagara Falls in the winter on the Canadian TV program World of Wizards.

Early in his career, Randi was sent a contract for a tour in Florida. His friends in New York mentioned to him that he’d certainly be working before audiences segregated by race, so before he signed the agreement, he wrote in a clause specifying that the promoters could not deny tickets to blacks or segregate the audiences in any way. Upon arriving on scene, he found that the concert promoter had ignored this stipulation in his contract. He discovered that blacks were forced to watch the show from the balcony, and he immediately walked away from the tour. Appealing to the American Guild of Variety Artists (AGVA), he was paid in full for the balance of the tour.

Randi was once accused of actually using 'psychic powers' to perform acts such as spoon bending. James Alcock relates this incident which occurred at a meeting where Randi was duplicating the performances of Uri Geller: A professor from the University at Buffalo shouted out that Randi was a fraud. Randi said "Yes indeed, I'm a trickster, I'm a cheat, I'm a charlatan, that's what I do for a living. Everything I've done here was by trickery." The professor shouted back: "That's not what I mean. You're a fraud because you're pretending to do these things through trickery, but you're actually using psychic powers and misleading us by not admitting it." The famous author and believer in spiritualism Arthur Conan Doyle had years earlier made a similar accusation against the magician Harry Houdini.
Author
Randi is author of Conjuring (1992), a biographical history of noted magicians. The book is subtitled: Being a Definitive History of the Venerable Arts of Sorcery, Prestidigitation, Wizardry, Deception, & Chicanery and of the Mountebanks & Scoundrels Who have Perpetrated these Subterfuges on a Bewildered Public, in short, MAGIC!. The book selects the most influential magicians, and explains their history in the context of strange deaths and career on the road. This work expanded on his 1976 book Houdini, His Life and Art, which focused on Houdini and his cohorts. Randi also wrote a children's book in 1989 titled The Magic World of the Amazing Randi introducing children to magic tricks.

In addition to his magic books, he has written several educational works about the paranormal and pseudoscientific. These include biographies of Uri Geller and Nostradamus as well as reference material on other major paranormal figures. He is currently working on A Magician in the Laboratory, which recounts his application of skepticism to science.
Career as a skeptic
Randi entered the international spotlight in 1972 when he publicly challenged the claims of Uri Geller. Randi accused Geller of being nothing more than a charlatan and a fraud using standard "magic" tricks to accomplish his allegedly paranormal feats, and he backed up his claims in the book The Truth About Uri Geller. Geller later sued Randi for 15 million dollars. Eventually Geller's suit against CSICOP was thrown out in 1995, and he was ordered to pay $120,000 for filing a "frivolous" lawsuit. Randi was a founding fellow and prominent member of CSICOP, the Committee for Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal. Randi later resigned from CSICOP during the period when Geller was filing numerous civil suits against him. CSICOP's leadership, wanting to avoid becoming a target of Geller's litigation, requested that Randi refrain from commenting on Geller. Randi refused and resigned. He still maintains a respectful relationship with the group and frequently writes articles for its magazine.

Randi has gone on to write several books criticizing beliefs and claims regarding the paranormal. He has also been instrumental in exposing frauds and charlatans who exploit this field for personal gain. In one example, his Project Alpha hoax, Randi revealed that he had been able to orchestrate a three year-long compromise of a privately-funded psychic research experiment. The hoax became a scandal and demonstrated the shortcomings of many paranormal research projects at the university level. Some said that the hoax was unethical, while others claimed his actions were a legitimate exercise in exposing poor research techniques.

Randi has also appeared on numerous other programs sometimes to directly debunk the claimed abilities of fellow guests. In a 1981 appearance on a show called That's My Line, Randi appeared opposite psychic James Hydrick, who claimed that he could move things with his mind, and demonstrated this ability on live television by apparently turning a page in a telephone book without touching it. Randi, having determined that the trick was most likely based on Hydrick surreptitiously blowing, arranged packaging peanuts on the table in front of the telephone book for the demonstration, preventing Hydrick from demonstrating his abilities without also giving away the secret that bursts of air were passing over the pages.http://video.google.ca/videoplay?docid=7471941094792399305 Many years later, Hydrick admitted his fraud.

Randi was awarded a MacArthur Foundation "Genius" award in 1986, drawing upon his conjuring skills to write and educate the public on superstition and pseudoscientific matters. The money was used for Randi's comprehensive exposé of faith healers including Peter Popoff, W. V. Grant and Ernest Angley. During the course of the investigation Randi was "healed" by these ministers. When Popoff was exposed, he was forced to declare bankruptcy within the year.

In 1988, Randi showed how gullible the media is by perpetrating a "fraud" of his own. By teaming up with Australia's 60 Minutes program and by releasing a fake press package he built up publicity for a spirit channeler named Carlos, who was actually an artist named Jose Alvares, a friend of Randi's. Randi would tell him what to say through sophisticated radio equipment. The media and the public were taken as no reporter bothered to check Carlos' credentials and history, which were all made up. The hoax was exposed on 60 Minutes; Carlos and Randi and explained how they pulled it off.

In the book The Faith Healers, Randi explains his anger and relentlessness as arising out of compassion for the helpless victims of frauds. Randi has also been critical of João de Deus, also known as John of God, a self-proclaimed psychic surgeon who has received international attention. Randi observed, referring to psychic surgery, "To any experienced conjuror, the methods by which these seeming miracles are produced are very obvious".

James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF)

In 1996, Randi established the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF). Randi updates the JREF's website on Fridays with a written commentary titled Swift: Online Newsletter of the JREF. Randi also contributes a regular column, titled "'Twas Brillig", to The Skeptics Society's Skeptic Magazine. In his weekly commentary, Randi often gives examples of what he feels is the nonsense that he deals with every day.

He has regularly featured on many podcasts that can be found online, including The Skeptics Society's official podcast Skepticality and the Center for Inquiry's official podcast Point of Inquiry . From September 2006, he contributed to The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe podcast with a column entitled "Randi Speaks".

The $1 million challenge

:Main article: The One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge

The James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF) currently offers a prize of one million U.S. dollars to anyone who can demonstrate a supernatural ability under agreed-upon scientific testing criteria. Similar to the paranormal challenges of John Nevil Maskelyne and Houdini, in 1964, Randi put up $1,000 of his own money payable to the first person who could provide objective proof of the paranormal. Since then, the prize money has grown to the current $1,000,000, and has formal published rules. No one has progressed past the preliminary test which is set up with parameters agreed to by both Randi and the applicant. He also refuses to accept any challengers who might suffer serious injury or death as a result of the testing they intend to undergo.



On Larry King Live March 6, 2001 Larry King asked Sylvia Browne if she would take the challenge and she agreed. Then Randi appeared with Browne on Larry King Live on September 3, 2001 and she again accepted the challenge. However, she has refused to be tested and Randi keeps a clock on his website recording the number of weeks that have passed since Sylvia accepted the challenge without following through.

During Larry King Live on June 5, 2001 Randi challenged Rosemary Altea to undergo testing for the million dollars. However Altea would not even address the question. Instead Altea, in part, replied "I agree with what he says, that there are many, many people who claim to be spiritual mediums, they claim to talk to the dead. There are many, people, we all know this. There are cheats and charlatans everywhere." Then on January 26, 2007 Altea and Randi again appeared on Larry King Live. Once again, she refused to answer whether or not she would take the One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge.

Randi has recently challenged David R. Hawkins to win the prize with Hawkins' "arm-pressing technique" (applied kinesiology), suggesting it would only take thirty minutes of easy work, but believing that Hawkins would not even attempt to apply for the challenge for "obvious" reasons.

Starting on April 1, 2007 only those with an already existing media profile and the backing of a reputable academic would be allowed to apply for the challenge. The resources freed up by not having to test obscure and possibly mentally ill claimants will then be used to more aggressively challenge notorious high-profile alleged psychics and mediums such as Sylvia Browne, Allison DuBois and John Edward with a campaign in the media.

JREF maintains a public log of past participants in the Million Dollar Challenge.
Licauco and James Randi Controversy
Randi met his nemesis, Jaime Licauco of the Philippines. Randi debunked claims in Licauco's Philippine Daily Inquirer column entitled "INNER AWARENESS" (October 24, 2006). Randi, inter alia, challenged Licauco to apply for the JREF $ 1 million dollar prize, since the latter claimed that "he has paranormal abilities". With point-by-point reply ("Setting the record straight", Inquiret.net, January 15, 2007), Licauco forthwith answered Randi's attacks. Licauco claimed that Randi "participated in the cover-up of a botched scientific investigation of Michel Gauquelin’s conclusion that there was a significant statistical correlation between birth dates of athletes and the position of Mars in the heavens". Licauco further said that "Randi’s group denounced Gauquelin’s finding only to eat their words later. To save face, they went so far as to manipulate scientific data to conform to their preconceived notion that astrology was pure hogwash".

Legal disputes

Randi has been involved in a variety of legal disputes but, despite having lost on several occasions, claims to have "never paid even one dollar or even one cent to anyone who ever sued me."
Eldon Byrd
In an interview with Twilight Zone Magazine, Randi accused Uri Geller and Eldon Byrd of being the ringleaders in a criminal blackmail plot aimed at destroying Randi. Byrd sued Randi when he was accused by the magician of being a convicted child molestor. Following the trial a press release from Randi said "Testimony adduced at the trial revealed that, in fact, Mr. Byrd had not been convicted of the crime of child molestation as suggested by Mr. Randi, but instead had been arrested for possession with intent to distribute obscene materials involving children, and had pled guilty to a reduced charge of possession with intent to distribute obscene materials". The jury also heard tesimony that Byrd had sexually molested, and later married, his sister-in-law, while Byrd's lawyer sought to discredit Randi by playing taped conversations of teen-age boys who called the magician's home allegedly for sex. The jury found that Randi's claim regarding Byrd was defamatory, but awarded Byrd $0 in damages (thus preventing further appeals by Byrd).
Uri Geller
In an interview with a Japanese newspaper, Randi was presented as saying that Uri Geller had driven a close friend to "shoot himself in the head," which Randi afterwards claimed was a metaphor lost in translation. However, Randi made a similar statement ("The scientist shot himself after I showed him how the key bending trick was done") in the August 23, 1986 Toronto Star that seemed to validate Geller's charge. Randi did not participate in the trial, but since the referenced suicide victim died of natural causes the judge found in Geller's favor, changed the charge from "libel" to "insult", and awarded Geller 500,000 yen (at the time about US$4400). Randi initially refused to pay the amount, and Geller later agreed not to pursue Randi for the money in a subsequent settlement with CSICOP.

Randi commented that Uri Geller's public performances were of the same quality as those found on the backs of cereal boxes. Geller sued both Randi and CSICOP. CSICOP argued that the organization was not responsible for Randi's statements. The court agreed that including CSICOP was frivolous and dropped them from the action. Geller was ordered to pay substantial damages to CSICOP.
Other
Allison DuBois, on whose life the television series Medium was based, threatened Randi with legal action for using a photo of her from her website in his December 17, 2004 commentary without her permission. Randi removed the photo, and now uses a caricature of DuBois when mentioning her on his site, beginning with his December 23, 2005 commentary.

Late in 1996 Randi launched a libel suit against a Toronto-area psychic/self-published author/entry-level web developer named Earl Gordon Curley. Curley had made a number of objectionable comments about Randi on Usenet. Despite constantly prodding Randi via Usenet to sue (Curley's implication being if Randi didn't sue then his allegations must be true), Curley seemed entirely surprised when Randi actually retained Toronto's largest law firm and initiated legal proceedings. The suit was eventually dropped in 1998 when Earl Curley died suddenly at the age of 51.

World records

The following are Guinness records.

* Randi was in a sealed casket for an hour and 44 minutes, which broke Harry Houdini's record of one hour and 31 minutes set on August 5, 1926.

* Randi was frozen in a block of ice for 55 minutes.

Bibliography

*A Magician in the Laboratory. (Forthcominghttp://www.randi.org/documents/randiresume.pdf) *An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural, 1995, St. Martin's Press ISBN 0-312-15119-5 (Online Version) *Conjuring, 1992 St. Martin's Press ISBN 0312097719 *Flim-Flam! Psychics, ESP, Unicorns, and Other Delusions, 1982, Prometheus Books, ISBN 0-87975-198-3 *Houdini, His Life and Art. Putnam Pub Group (November 1976) ISBN 0448125528 *James Randi: Psychic Investigator, 1991, ISBN 1-85283-144-8 *Test Your ESP Potential. Dover Publications Inc. (31 Dec 1982) ISBN 0486242692 *The Faith Healers, 1987, Prometheus Books, ISBN 0-87975-369-2. (ISBN 0-87975-535-0 1989 edition) (Foreword by Carl Sagan) *The Magic of Uri Geller, 1982, ISBN 0-345-24796-5 (later renamed The Truth About Uri Geller ISBN 0-87975-199-1) *The Magic World of the Amazing Randi. Adams Media Corporation (September 1989) ISBN 1558509828 *The Mask of Nostradamus: The Prophecies of the World's Most Famous Seer, 1990, Charles Scribner's Sons ISBN 0-684-19056-7 or ISBN 0-87975-830-9. *Wrong! (Forthcominghttp://www.randi.org/documents/randiresume.pdf)

TV and film

Actor
*Beyond Desire (1994) as the Coroner *Penn & Teller Get Killed (1989) .... 3rd Rope Holder ... aka Dead Funny *Penn & Teller's Invisible Thread (1987) (TV) *Happy Days - "The Magic Show" (1978) as the Amazing Randi *Good to See You Again, Alice Cooper (1974) as the Dentist/Executioner *Wonderama (1955) (TV) as The Amazing Randi *Ragtime (1981) (stunt coordinator: Houdini)
Himself
*Anderson Cooper 360, CNN (January 19, 2007 and January 30, 2007) *Exploring Psychic Powers Live (June 7 1989) (Hosted by Bill Bixby) *Fornemmelse for snyd (2003) TV Series (also archive footage) *Horizon - Homeopathy: The Test (2002) TV Episode *Inside Edition- (20 January 2006 and 27 February 2007) TV *James Randi: Psychic Investigator (1991) (Open Media series for the ITV network) *Larry King Live of CNN (June 5, 2001, September 3, 2001, and January 26, 2007) *Magic (2004) (mini) TV Series *Magic or Miracle (1983) *Mitä ihmettä? (2003) TV Series *NOVA: Secrets of the Psychics (1993) *Penn & Teller: Bullshit! **- Signs from Heaven (2005) TV Episode **- ESP (2003) TV Episode **- End of the World (2003) TV Episode *Scams, Schemes, and Scoundrels]] (A&E Special) (March 30, 1997) *Spotlight on James Randi (2002) (TV) *That's My Line (1980) (Appeared with James Hydrick) *The Art of Magic (1998) (TV) *The Don Lane Show (1980) *The Power of Belief (October 6, 1998) (ABC News Special) (TV) *The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (32 appearances) *The Ultimate Psychic Challenge (Discovery Channel/Channel 4) (2003) *The View ABC TV (1999) *20/20 ABC TV (May 11, 2007)

See also

*James Randi Educational Foundation *International Zetetic challenge *Pigasus Award *Project Alpha *Scientific skepticism *Basava Premanand who continues the INR 100,000 Abraham Kovoor's challenge against supernatural and miraculous powers. *Rationalist Prabir Ghosh and his $50,000 challenge against astrology and the paranormal. *Narendra Nayak is another rationalist Indian that is campaigning against so-called miracles and quacks *Robert Todd Carroll's Skeptic's Dictionary *Jacques Benveniste, an immunologist whose homeopathy research was investigated by Randi.

References

Footnotes
Books
*

External links

Official * James Randi Educational Foundation – Official website

Supportive * James Randi in the Skeptic's Dictionary * Project Alpha in the Skeptic's Dictionary * How Randi and fake psychic Carlos fooled millions * * James Randi Educational Foundation YouTube

Media * James Randi interview (November, 2007) from the BSAlert.com radio show where Mr. Randi discusses the TV show "Phenomenon", the current status of Uri Geller and his thoughts about whether society is becoming more or less superstitious. * * * "20 Major Aspects of Liars, Cheats, and Frauds" by James Randi" *The Power of Belief (Video clip) from ABC News *Randi's Internet Audio Show from the James Randi Educational Foundation *Skepticality Internet Radio

Transcripts * (Sylvia Browne and Randi) * (Sylvia Browne's manager and Randi) * (Altea and James Randi) * (Rosemary Altea and Randi) * (Sylvia Browne and Randi)

Criticism * A Skeptical Look At James Randi Michael Prescott * James Randi's response to criticism James Randi Educational Foundation * Benveniste, Jacques, and Peter Jurgens. On the Role of Stage Magicians in Biological Research The Anomalist 1998 * Thalbourne, Michael A, “Science versus showmanship: A history of the Randi hoax,” American Society for Psychical Research 89 (4) OCT 1995

Who is James Randi connected to?
Add a Connection

This biography says:

*MacArthur Foundation Fellowship 1986 *Richard Dawkins Award 2003 *Philip J. Klass Award 2007

This biography says:

...You're a fraud because you're pretending to do these things through trickery, but you're actually using psychic powers and misleading us by not admitting it." The famous author and believer in spiritualism Arthur Conan Doyle had years earlier made a similar accusation against the magician Harry Houdini.

That biography says:

...Skeptics claim that any improvements are the result of natural spontaneous remission, a placebo effect, possibly caused by conventional medicine, or wishful thinking on the part of the patient. James Randi, in particular, criticises ABC for not approaching the situation in a more scientific way....

This biography says:

...You're a fraud because you're pretending to do these things through trickery, but you're actually using psychic powers and misleading us by not admitting it." The famous author and believer in spiritualism Arthur Conan Doyle had years earlier made a similar accusation against the magician Harry Houdini.

This biography says:

...Randi was awarded a MacArthur Foundation "Genius" award in 1986, drawing upon his conjuring skills to write and educate the public on superstition and pseudoscientific matters. The money was used for Randi's comprehensive exposé of faith healers including Peter Popoff, W. V. Grant and Ernest Angley. During the course of the investigation Randi was "healed" by these ministers...

That biography says:

...His ministry is based in Upland, California, and is funded through donations. A widely popular minister in the 1980s, he went bankrupt in 1987 after James Randi and Steve Shaw debunked his methods by showing that instead of receiving information about audience members from supernatural sources, he received it through an in-ear receiver.

This biography says:

...On Larry King Live March 6, 2001 Larry King asked Sylvia Browne if she would take the challenge and she agreed. Then Randi appeared with Browne on Larry King Live on September 3, 2001 and she again accepted the challenge...

This biography says:

...Randi for many years has been an amateur astronomer, influenced by his friend Carl Sagan. In 1981 asteroid 3163 Randi was named after Randi....
How is James Randi connected to Paul Kurtz? Tell the world.

This biography says:

*James Randi Educational Foundation *International Zetetic challenge *Pigasus Award *Project Alpha *Scientific skepticism *Basava Premanand who continues the INR 100,000 Abraham Kovoor's challenge against supernatural and miraculous powers. *Rationalist Prabir Ghosh and his $50,000 challenge against astrology and the paranormal...

That biography says:

...After his death in India, the Indian Rationalist Association continues his Rs.100,000 challenge. Similar challenges have been posed by Basava Premanand and James Randi.

This biography says:

...In the 1960's, Randi worked in Philippine night clubs before Ferdinand Marcos and wife Imelda Marcos were in power....

This biography says:

*James Randi Educational Foundation *International Zetetic challenge *Pigasus Award *Project Alpha *Scientific skepticism *Basava Premanand who continues the INR 100,000 Abraham Kovoor's challenge against supernatural and miraculous powers. *Rationalist Prabir Ghosh and his $50,000 challenge against astrology and the paranormal. *Narendra Nayak is another rationalist Indian that is campaigning against so-called miracles and quacks *Robert Todd Carroll's Skeptic's Dictionary *Jacques Benveniste, an immunologist whose homeopathy research was investigated by Randi.

This biography says:

...Randi said that one reason for becoming an American citizen was a Canadian police search he experienced while on tour with Alice Cooper....

That biography says:

...The multi-level stage show by then featured numerous special effects including Billion Dollar Bills, decapitated baby dolls and mannequins, a dental psychosis scene complete with dancing teeth, and the ultimate execution prop and highlight of the show—The Guillotine. The guillotine and other stage effects were designed for the band by magician James Randi, and during some of the shows, Randi appeared on stage as the executioner. By this stage, the Alice Cooper group had reached its peak in every way and were the biggest band in the industry...

This biography says:

*James Randi Educational Foundation *International Zetetic challenge *Pigasus Award *Project Alpha *Scientific skepticism *Basava Premanand who continues the INR 100,000 Abraham Kovoor's challenge against supernatural and miraculous powers...

This biography says:

...In addition to his magic books, he has written several educational works about the paranormal and pseudoscientific. These include biographies of Uri Geller and Nostradamus as well as reference material on other major paranormal figures. He is currently working on A Magician in the Laboratory, which recounts his application of skepticism to science.

That biography says:

...Nostradamus enthusiasts have credited him with predicting numerous events in world history, from the Great Fire of London, by way of the rise of Napoleon I of France and Adolf Hitler, to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, but only ever in hindsight. See Alternative views below. It is not only skeptics such as James Randi who suggest that his reputation as a prophet is largely manufactured by modern-day supporters who fit his words to events that have either already occurred or are so imminent as to be inevitable, a process sometimes known as "retroactive clairvoyance." There is no evidence in the academic literature (see Sources) to suggest that any Nostradamus quatrain has ever been interpreted as predicting a specific event before it occurred, other than in vague, general terms that could equally apply to any number of other events.

This biography says:

...The resources freed up by not having to test obscure and possibly mentally ill claimants will then be used to more aggressively challenge notorious high-profile alleged psychics and mediums such as Sylvia Browne, Allison DuBois and John Edward with a campaign in the media....

That biography says:

...Skeptic James Randi says that people such as DuBois give the appearance of psychic powers through cold reading techniques...

This biography says:

...James Alcock relates this incident which occurred at a meeting where Randi was duplicating the performances of Uri Geller: A professor from the University at Buffalo shouted out that Randi was a fraud. Randi said "Yes indeed, I'm a trickster, I'm a cheat, I'm a charlatan, that's what I do for a living...

That biography says:

...Since that time various magicians and skeptics, who deny that he has paranormal abilities, have suggested possible ways in which Geller could have tricked the scientists using misdirection techniques. These critics, who include Richard Feynman, James Randi and Martin Gardner, have accused him of using his demonstrations fraudulently outside of the entertainment business...

This biography says:

...The JREF sponsors the famous million dollar challenge offering a prize of US $1,000,000 to anyone who can demonstrate evidence of any paranormal, supernatural or occult power or event, under test conditions agreed to by both parties. He was a regular guest on the The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, and is occasionally featured on the television program Penn & Teller: Bullshit!.

That biography says:

...Carson, an experienced stage magician, wanted a neutral demonstration of Geller's alleged abilities, so, at the advice of his friend and fellow magician James Randi, he gave Geller several spoons out of his desk drawer and asked him to bend them with his psychic powers...

This biography says:

...The money was used for Randi's comprehensive exposé of faith healers including Peter Popoff, W. V. Grant and Ernest Angley. During the course of the investigation Randi was "healed" by these ministers...

That biography says:

...Grant was involved in faith healing, and was investigated often for "faking" supposed healings. James Randi explained that Grant had notes of ailments of audience members before the show, a "sleight of hand" trick to make a leg appear to grow, put members of the audience who walked in in wheel chairs before the event (then asking them to stand and walk) hot reading and cold reading techniques...

This biography says:

...Randi has also appeared on numerous other programs sometimes to directly debunk the claimed abilities of fellow guests. In a 1981 appearance on a show called That's My Line, Randi appeared opposite psychic James Hydrick, who claimed that he could move things with his mind, and demonstrated this ability on live television by apparently turning a page in a telephone book without touching it...

That biography says:

...However, Hydrick deliberately readjusted the pencil beforehand so that it was as precarious as possible and so would move with the slight disturbance caused by his hands. He also caused a page from a telephone book to turn over, again, allegedly by telekinesis. James Randi awarded the program a 1980 Uri Award, later renamed the Pigasus Award, "for declaring a simple magic trick to be genuine."

This biography says:

*Anderson Cooper 360, CNN (January 19, 2007 and January 30, 2007) *Exploring Psychic Powers Live (June 7 1989) (Hosted by Bill Bixby) *Fornemmelse for snyd (2003) TV Series (also archive footage) *Horizon - Homeopathy: The Test (2002) TV Episode *Inside Edition- (20 January 2006 and 27 February 2007) TV *James Randi: Psychic Investigator (1991) (Open Media series for the ITV network) *Larry King Live of CNN (June 5, 2001, September 3, 2001, and January 26, 2007) *Magic (2004) (mini) TV Series *Magic or Miracle (1983) *Mitä ihmettä? (2003) TV Series *NOVA: Secrets of the Psychics (1993) *Penn & Teller: Bullshit! **- Signs from Heaven (2005) TV Episode **- ESP (2003) TV Episode **- End of the World (2003) TV Episode *Scams, Schemes, and Scoundrels]] (A&E Special) (March 30, 1997) *Spotlight on James Randi (2002) (TV) *That's My Line (1980) (Appeared with James Hydrick) *The Art of Magic (1998) (TV) *The Don Lane Show (1980) *The Power of Belief (October 6, 1998) (ABC News Special) (TV) *The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (32 appearances) *The Ultimate Psychic Challenge (Discovery Channel/Channel 4) (2003) *The View ABC TV (1999) *20/20 ABC TV (May 11, 2007)
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