SRW, You said you have seen people with NO psychic ability do this same thing? How in the hell does that work?
As others have mentioned, SRW was talking about the art of Cold Reading.
I see that you have already been given links to some articles on the subject. If you are interested in reading about it in depth, I would recommend Ian Rowland's book "The Full Facts Bok About Cold Reading". It can be purchased on Rowland's web site,
www.ianrowland.com.
If you're saying they find out info beforehand, then that doesn't count. Lifetime makes a disclaimer about no one having prior knowledge before the taping of the show.
The show is not the place to go for an objective analysis of the show. You need to realize, the show has a vested interest in propping up the woman's purported abilities.
As far as that disclaimer goes: I believe it was "Haunting Evidence", but it was one of the many "psychic-detective" type of shows which had a similar disclaimer which was proven to be factually inaccurate (to put it nicely).
The show featured a "psychic", a "ghost hunter" and a third person (I forget what he supposedly was) which would examine "cold cases" and try to solve them.
The disclaimer in the show stated that none of the three had any prior knowledge of the cases they were investigating, prior to the taping of the shows.
It was subsequently discovered that the "psychic" had had extensive contacts with the families in the cases, sometimes for months and years prior to the taping of the show.
You're saying she is guilty until proven innocent, right? She is not legit until she comes to James for his money?
We are saying that until she proves her abilities in a controlled environment (not through anecdotes, not through a TV show which has a vested interest in making you believe in her abilities), we do not believe she is psychic.
When a skeptic hears an extraordinary claim (such as this woman's claim to be "psychic), they adopt a provisional stance of doubt, pending evidence to the contrary.
And this woman's TV show is *not* evidence. To believe the show would be as naive as believing the woman's own press releases.