Greetings and Cool News!
Hello Everyone,
I hope everyone is enjoying this Memorial Day weekend. I wanted to share some cool news with you.
First, I'm thrilled to announce our featured "psychic detective extraordinare" from Akashic Who's Who of Psychics, Carla Baron has sealed a deal with Court TV. Carla has done some amazing "missing people" work and has been sought after by all the major news shows including, ABC's PrimeTime to discuss her work. Wishing you an uproarous applause Carla! Check out the Court TV schedule.
This past week I personally have been busy with long distance talks with a TV producer who is impressed with my psychic experience and knowledge and wants me to participate in a very intriguing Psychic Reality Show. I can't reveal all the details of the show just yet, but will post all the production updates as I know them. Presently the program is in pre-production, but I understand the show is tentatively scheduled for broadcast this Fall.
Interested in a good murder mystery complete with a remote viewer? Today my husband and I watched SUSPECT ZERO via Video On Demand (I love these cable on demand movies!).
In SUSPECT ZERO, FBI Agent Tom Mackelway finds himself caught in a cat-and-mouse game with a brutal serial killer, and all clues point to a renegade agent "gone native." Trained by the government to use his psychic abilities to track and capture other serial killers, the renegade is killing other serial killers and claims to be in pursuit of the ultimate serial killer, a man he calls Suspect Zero. As Mackelway becomes increasingly obsessed with his suspect, he must decide what happens when pursuer and prey come face to face – and if rational justice or primal revenge will prevail.
If you're into serial-killer thrillers, you'll want to see Suspect Zero if only to soak up the genre's reliable penchant for creepy atmosphere and creepier behavior. Dark, anguished, and saturated with superficial style, it's a passable exercise in mystery from E. Elias Merhige, who fared better (both critically and artistically) with his acclaimed 2001 film Shadow of the Vampire. The directorial vision evident in that film is also apparent here, but it's pretentiously over-indulged in a grisly plot about the tormented victim of a secret, psychically abusive crime-fighting program (Ben Kingsley) whose pursuit of serial killers in New Mexico is designed to lure a similarly tormented FBI agent (Aaron Eckhart) and his understanding partner (Carrie-Anne Moss) into an investigation that grows increasingly violent and tragically intense. Like Eckhart's character, you may need a handful of aspirin after subjecting yourself to Merhige's visual excess, but as yet another variant of Seven, Suspect Zero scores points for attempting something different. -- Amazon Review
I plan to watch this film again! Take care and enjoy your day!
Victoria
