Straw man. Neither of these claims has been made.
Are you serious? I made a statement.
There is nothing illegal about scripting or rigging something that is then presented as reality television.
Strawman. I never said there was.
Yes, any contract is void if it requires a party to do something illegal. There is nothing illegal about what's happening here. It's no different than the stage crew of a magic show being enjoined from disclosing their knowledge of how the trick was done. That such a show appears to saw a woman in half -- but really doesn't -- isn't fraud.
Ahhh....you are going to word cloud me. Let's revisit some of what I said.
I said your NDA point is moot because we have overwhelming evidence from the reaction of joy and happiness in the response to the reading from the celebrities. An NDA isn't why they don't step forward--they don't step forward because they are happy with the product. The NDA is irrelevant.
At no point have I claimed anything was illegal. "A crew of a magic show" can't give away proprietary information--you can't tell Pepsi how Coke is made as I said.
However, any celebrity can speak up and complain about a product if they have insight about fraud, Coke is using dirty water was my example.
I never said anything about "legally questionable." I said that any celebrity can complain about fraud or complain about the quality of the service provided. That's not covered under a NDA. If during the reading a celebrity notices that Henry is wearing an earpiece and is on the phone secretly with the celebrity's mother, speaking up to complain would not violate an NDA because the technique in use was different than what was agreed upon.
>My argument is that Henry's show is produced the same way every other reality television show is produced, including many others that allege supernatural or magical content.
Right. And my argument is that if I am in a show that claims there are ghosts in a house, and I later find out that those ghosts were really not there, but artificially manufactured by a special effects team in order to fool 2 million television viewers, I can speak out with impunity. Perhaps not about how the ghosts were manufactured, but the fact they were not there.
>Nothing about this constitutes fraud.
Wait. Tyler Henry hires a research team to explore my background, has somebody come to my house, interviews me under a false pretext to gain info ("we're taking a survey"), goes to my Mom's house and interviews her, and then gives me an expensive 30 minute reading in which he uses the secretly obtained information to fool me--and in the Universe that you live in this does not constitute fraud?
>I'll leave you to mull over the asinine naivete of that insinuation.
How about instead I mull over your inability to follow a basic line of reasoning.