Royal Oak Tribune

James Randi, dazzling magician, skeptic, dies at 92

- By Matt Sedensky

James Randi, a magician who later challenged spoon benders, mind readers and faith healers with such voracity that he became regarded as the country’s foremost skeptic, has died, his foundation announced. He was 92.

The James Randi Educationa­l Foundation confirmed the death, saying simply that its founder succumbed to “age-related causes” on Tuesday.

Entertaine­r, genius, debunker, atheist Randi was them all. He began gaining attention not long after dropping out of high school to join the carnival. As the Amazing Randi, he escaped from a locked coffin submerged in water and froma straitjack­et as he dangled over Niagara Falls.

Magical as his feats seemed, Randi concluded his shows around the globe with a simple statement, insisting no otherworld­ly powers were at play.

“Everything you have seen here is tricks,” he would say. “There is nothing supernatur­al involved.”

The magician’s transparen­cy gave a glimpse of what would become his longest-running act, as the country’s skeptic-in- chief. In that role, his first widely seen exploit was also his most enduring.

On a 1972 episode of “The Tonight Show,” he helped Johnny Carson set up Uri Geller, the Israeli performer who claimed to bend spoons with his mind. Randi ensured the spoons and other props were kept from Geller’s hands until showtime to prevent any tampering.

The result was an agonizing 22 minutes inwhich Geller was unable to perform any tricks.

Randi had bushy white eyebrows and beard, a bald head, and gold-rimmed glasses, and bounced his 5-foot- 6 (1.6 meter) frame energetica­lly, even in his final years. He sought to disprove not just those who read palms and minds, but chiropract­ors, homeopaths and others he saw as predators seeking innocent people’s money.

Randi targeted those he saw as frauds with a tenacity and dedication he admitted was an obsession. His efforts were reminiscen­t of those of his great predecesso­r Harry Houdini, who devoted large portions of his time to debunking spirituali­sts and their seances.

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