Wednesday, September 6, 2017

Don't use psychics in documentaries



When I was a kid, I went to a Bigfoot "documentary". At one point, they proved the existence of Bigfoot with a visit to a French psychic. They talked to the French guy about Bigfoot, then they showed him a box. They didn't tell him what was inside, but they wanted his psychic impressions of its contents. He said he saw a big hairy apeman who lives in the woods. The opened the box and inside was a plaster cast of a Bigfoot footprint!

That was better than the one in a UFO documentary. A psychic was in communication with a space alien. His name was pronounced "krill", but it was spelled Crylll. Three L's. And they have the equivalent of a letter C and...why am I trying to debunk this idiocy.

So I watched a documentary about Robert William Fisher who is on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list having murdered his wife and two children before blowing up their house in Scottsdale, Arizona. He fled in his wife's car.

The documentary seemed fairly conservative. When people gave their opinions they were careful to explain that they were opinions and they could be wrong.

Then they brought in a stinkin' psychic. She said he lives near a beach in a house made of wood, not stucco, and he has a new wife and son.

Why do they do that?

1 comment:

  1. Exactly. She said Absolutely twice that he would get caught in 2013. It's nearly 2019 and he hasn't been found. Psychics are frauds. They are just speculating like anyone else they can't be credible just because they say they are psychic.

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