- Joined
- Oct 22, 2002
- Messages
- 46,943
- Location
- Frozen in Michigan
- Gender
- Old Fart
- Basic Beliefs
- Don't be a dick.
I remember watching him (and Carl Sagan) on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. According to the Wikipedia, he did 32 appearances on the show over the course of 20 years.
Why? Well a few years ago I had a long conversation with Bob Uecker, who had done over 100 appearances. We talked about that, and according to Bob, if Johnny liked you on your first time out, he'd have you back. It didn't matter if you were promoting a book or a show or nothing at all. If Johnny liked you, he'd have you on the show.
Johnny Carson apparently liked Randi quite a bit.
MIAMI—Struggling to mentally close herself off from the recently deceased skeptic, local psychic Rosemary Shanley confirmed Thursday she was already sick of James Randi’s specter haunting her place of business and ragging on her from the afterlife. “I’m sitting here with my crystal ball trying to see into the future, and it’s hard enough without the ghost of James Randi hovering in front of me and whispering that I’m a fraud and a huckster,” said Shanley, adding that she tried to banish the spirit of the famed debunker and stage magician by sprinkling holy water throughout the room, but the Amazing Randi just scoffed and called the ritual “easily disproved theatrics.” “What’s worse is that he’s taken to appearing before my clients and showing them how he can do everything I can do using nothing more than simple trickery. I was impressed when he first showed up and appeared to roll a pencil across my desk using only his mind, but then he insisted it was basic misdirection and called me a dumbass for believing in psychic powers. That dude needs to get off my case and go heckle some other clairvoyant.” At press time, sources from the beyond confirmed Randi had taken possession of Shanley’s body and was attempting to locate Uri Geller.
Then on how JR exaggerated some of his accomplishments, like his "Carlos" hoax.And there was some bad! Randi wasn’t perfect. As we discuss in that show, Randi didn’t really care about making the skeptic movement safe or welcoming for women, and he also didn’t really care about his foundation, the James Randi Educational Foundation, becoming an actual educational foundation or continuing on without him after his retirement. Which all sucks! Because the JREF was so great back in the 2000s, and there was a large and growing population of people who Randi inspired to get actively involved in helping the world think more critically.
So Randi’s legacy is complicated, despite all the great memories I will always have of him, and of my unending gratitude for Randi setting me on this path and introducing me to so many wonderful people.
I’m not saying that Randi was right to exaggerate his accomplishments, but I am saying that it’s not a huge shock. He wasn’t a scientist, he was a performer. Performers perform. Every story that came out of Randi’s mouth had details that were way more interesting than what had actually happened. It’s who he was.
Linking to Extrasensory Perception (ESP) | in Chapter 04: SensesIn science there’s a phenomenon known as the “file-drawer effect,” so named for the habit of a less-than-ethical scientist who gets results he doesn’t like quietly slipping them into a file drawer, never to be published or seen again. JB Rhine literally had a file drawer that he specifically used as a receptacle for results he didn’t like. He believed in ESP so strongly that when subjects didn’t do well on ESP tests, he assumed they were using ESP to purposely fuck with him. He buried the negative results and published the positive results.
That reminds me of someone I once knew who worked for Psychic Friends. As "evidence" for his powers, he noted some things about me that he could easily learn online. I asked him about things that I don't go online about, like what I'd named by computer's main disk drive, and he didn't response. It should be easy for him to read my mind and find out -- if he had that ability.I first heard of Randi, who died at the age of 92 on Oct. 20, when I was working in a magic shop while attending college in the late ’90s. I was a fan of Penn & Teller and they were fans of his, so I learned all about him: a magician who had once escaped from a straitjacket while dangling over Niagara Falls and had entertained Johnny Carson. By the time I learned about him, Randi had already retired, turning his talents instead to exposing frauds who took advantage of a gullible, uneducated, or simply unsuspecting public. He offered a million-dollar check to anyone who could scientifically prove they had paranormal abilities, and he became the bane of people like the spoon-bending Uri Geller or the gravel-voiced Sylvia Browne, who would confidently and dispassionately tell the parents of missing children that their kids were dead (when occasionally they would turn up very much alive).
Then the decline of TAM and JREF. The site JREF - Home still exists, though in "About": "On January 1, 2016 the Foundation ceased being a public charity and became a private non-operating foundation. The JREF is no longer soliciting donations and any donations made after January 1, 2016 may not be fully tax deductible"Privately, Randi apparently complained to mutual friends about me pushing feminism, trying to change the culture of the movement that he had fostered for the past few decades. He thought that by asking skeptics to be better, I was making the movement look worse.
We went years without speaking. The last time I saw him was at a mutual friend’s New Year’s party to ring in 2018. I was nervous but decided to say hello. He gave me a big hug and a smile. I don’t know if it was genuine or if it was simply Randi’s incredibly well-honed ability to make everyone feel seen and appreciated in his presence.
Back when things were good between us, I was so proud to be a part of what I thought was a movement with truly unlimited growth. ...
I mourn for Randi, but I also mourn for what could have become of the movement he fathered. ...