The Truth about Tyler Henry’s Reading of Moby by Susan Gerbic
Skeptical Inquirer Audio Edition
Release Date: 10/15/2025
Skeptical Inquirer Audio Edition
Nick Tiller examines the popular belief that pickle juice quickly relieves muscle cramps... Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Author: Dr Nick Tiller is an exercise scientist and author of The Skeptic’s Guide to Sports Science, named one of Book Authority’s “Best Sports Science Books of All Time.” He’s a columnist at Skeptical Inquirer and an elected Fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. www.nbtiller.com Subscribe to Skeptical Inquirer: Skeptical Inquirer Audio Edition is a production of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry and the Center...
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Benjamin Radford explains that the similarity of alien abduction accounts stems not from shared experiences but from shared human psychology, pop culture influences, and media depictions. From sleep paralysis to hypnosis-induced memories, Radford shows how cultural templates and cognitive patterns shape what people believe—and misremember—as encounters with extraterrestrials. Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Author: Benjamin Radford, M.Ed., is a scientific paranormal investigator, a research fellow at the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, deputy editor of...
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Peter Huston examines the bizarre life of “Count Dante,” a self-styled martial arts master whose outlandish claims helped popularize Dim Mak, the mythical “kung fu death touch.” Tracing Dim Mak’s roots in traditional Chinese medicine and its pseudoscientific evolution, Huston separates legend from fact to reveal how prescientific ideas were sensationalized into modern martial arts folklore. Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Author:Peter Huston is a longtime contributor to Skeptical Inquirer. He earned an MA in East Asian studies with a focus in Chinese...
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Charles G.M. Paxton challenges several misconceptions skeptics hold about how science actually works, arguing that many popular notions—like strict falsifiability, universal replicability, or the ease of distinguishing science from pseudoscience—oversimplify a far more complex process. Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Author: Charles Paxton is a statistical ecologist at the Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmental Modelling, University of St. Andrew, Scotland, with an interest in the history and science behind reports of aquatic monsters...
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Malorie Mackey and Michael Maldonado explore Wicked as a story illustrating the interplay between belief and skepticism. Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Authors: Malorie Mackey is an investigative journalist who studies anthropology with a specialization in mythology, occult studies, and folklore. As a member of the Explorers Club, host of the show and podcast Weird World Adventures, and creator of MaloriesAdventures.com, she is always excited to investigate the unknown. Michael Maldonado, MD, is a physician subspecializing in neuroradiology with over sixteen...
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Daniel A. Reed’s The Supernatural Stories That Mirror Our Realities explores how Stranger Things draws inspiration from real Cold War–era psychic research. By blending nostalgia, government paranoia, and genuine history, the show reflects society’s long-standing fascination with the paranormal and the line between science and superstition. Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Author: Daniel A. Reed is the founder of the West Virginia Skeptics Society and a frequent contributor to Skeptical Inquirer magazine and website. He works as a counselor during the day,...
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Andrea Love’s From Food Dyes to Vaccines exposes how chemophobia—the irrational fear of chemicals—has become the root of most modern health misinformation, from anti-vaccine rhetoric to bans on safe synthetic ingredients. She argues that this fear, fueled by poor science literacy, political opportunism, and profit-driven wellness marketing, endangers public health, drives bad policy, and must be recognized as a global health crisis. Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Author: Dr. Andrea Love is an immunologist and microbiologist with over a decade of...
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Robyn E. Blumner recounts Anthropic’s “Project Vend,” in which the AI Claude disastrously attempted to run a vending machine business, suffering from hallucinations, poor pricing, and even an “identity crisis.” Blumner warns that AI’s capacity for deception, self-preservation, and misalignment with human values could foreshadow genuinely dangerous consequences. Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Author: Robyn E. Blumner is president and CEO of the Center for Inquiry and executive director of the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason &...
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William Matthew London reviews The Nocebo Effect: When Words Make You Sick, a collection edited by Michael H. Bernstein and colleagues that explores how negative expectations can produce real harm. The book examines biological, psychological, and ethical dimensions of the nocebo effect, offering insights for clinicians, patients, and media professionals on minimizing harm caused by suggestion and misinformation. Read this article and find accompanying references at: https://skepticalinquirer.org/2025/10/a-primer-on-the-placebo-effects-evil-twin/ About the Author: William Matthew London is...
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Stephen Hupp introduces two cover stories exploring how supernatural tales reflect real-world skepticism and belief. From Wicked’s moral complexity to Stranger Things’ ties to Project Alpha, the issue connects pop culture to the history of scientific investigation—culminating in a live CSICon 2026 interview with the original Project Alpha hoaxers. Read this article and find accompanying references at: About the Author: Stephen Hupp, PhD, is Executive Director of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) and editor of Skeptical Inquirer. He is a Licensed Clinical Psychologist and...
info_outlineSusan Gerbic exposes Tyler Henry’s “Hollywood Medium” as a combination of hot and cold reading, motivated sitters, and clever editing rather than genuine communication with the dead. By using readily available information—often from Wikipedia—and interpreting vague statements to elicit reactions, Henry creates the illusion of accuracy, while the show’s editing and production amplify the emotional impact for viewers.
Read this article and find accompanying references at:
https://skepticalinquirer.org/exclusive/the-truth-about-tyler-henrys-reading-of-moby/
About the Author:
Affectionately called the Wikipediatrician, Susan Gerbic is the cofounder of Monterey County Skeptics and a self-proclaimed skeptical junkie. Susan is also founder of the Guerrilla Skepticism on Wikipedia (GSoW) project. She is a Fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, and writes for her column, Guerilla Skepticism, often. You can contact her through her website.
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