Uri geller how does




















The former glamour model opened up about her eldest son, who is diagnosed with ADHD, autism, genetic condition Prader-Willi Syndrome, and septo-optic dysplasia, which causes blindness. When Harvey was born, the year-old was told by doctors that he was completely blind and that he'd never be able to see. The former Loose Women panelist then sought several opinions and even travelled to the US for another assessment, but was told that Harvey was unable to see.

However, Harvey, 19, is now able to see to some degree and Katie believes it's down to the Israeli-British illusionist's help. In her new book Harvey and Me, she writes: "We naturally got chatting and we were speaking about Harvey. I can guarantee that one day he will see. Did he think he was Jesus or something? Go for it. Katie then explained that Uri began "rubbing the spoon and it started bending right in front of my eyes".

No physical force. Later we went outside. Geller asked again if I had any metal. I produced my car key. He placed it on the sidewalk and covered it with his outstretched hand. When he removed his hand the key was found broken in half. It was my key, identifiable by its serial number. We had the key examined under an electron microscope. This revealed a crystalline alignment typical of a thermal break meaning it had melted rather than a flexion break. To confirm this, the folks at the lab broke another Volkswagen key by flexion and examined it.

There was no similarity. I think it is right to call Geller a showman. But a magician? I think not. His repertoire is too narrow, boring, and undependable. I found both your explanation and other lengthier exposes shallow, unconvincing, and objectively less believable than what I experienced.

Give it another shot, would you? Honestly, David, aluminum-siding salesmen must love you. All of us have seen convincing examples of table i. Careful questioning or video analysis afterward usually reveals otherwise. In Gellerism Revealed Ben Harris explains several tricks in which items seem to bend while a spectator is holding onto them.

Follow Uri. About Uri. Uri Geller Museum. Articles and Columns. Photo Gallery. What People Say. Uri's Charity Work. Uri's Art Work. Contact Uri. Scan to Follow Uri on Twitter.

Read All Latest Articles.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000