DIALING UP DOLLARS : PSYCHICS FORECAST FUTURE OF FORTUNE.Byline: Pete Brush Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. The Psychic Friends Network The Psychic Friends Network was a telephone psychic service operating in the United States in the 1990s. Founded in 1990 by Baltimore businessman Mike Laskey, and it is probably best known for its talk show-like, late night infomercials hosted by singer Dionne Warwick and psychic predicted Jennifer Desjardins' future would be full of money and happiness. It didn't foresee the legal trouble she would face after running up $3,000 in charges to the telephone service. Desjardins and two friends made more than a dozen calls to the Psychic Friends Network over a period of several days at a cost of up to $3.99 per minute, or about $240 an hour. ``They told us we were going to have money and good jobs,'' said Desjardins, 20, of Torrington, Conn. Desjardins and her friends are part of a growing audience for the phone psychics who claim to read mental vibrations through telephone lines. ``It's a social phenomenon,'' said Arthur Warwick, a psychiatrist at the University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
adj. 1. Selecting or employing individual elements from a variety of sources, systems, or styles: an eclectic taste in music; an eclectic approach to managing the economy. 2. age.'' However, telephone industry analysts say it's money, not spirituality, that is driving the toll-call clairvoyance clairvoyance (klâr'voi`əns), alleged power to perceive, as though visually, objects or persons not discernible through the ordinary sense channels. industry. With an average call bringing in $40, it doesn't take a crystal ball to see that psychic phone services are a big business. Mark Plakius, managing director of Strategic Telemedia, a New York-based market research firm, estimates the services are a $300 million-a-year industry. That constitutes one-third of the total ``1-900'' market, which includes services ranging from consumer help lines to phone-in polls. ``Psychic hotlines are the anchor of the 1-900 industry,'' Plakius said. Moreover, the psychic phone lines have powerful allies. Long-distance carriers such as AT&T Corp. and MCI Communications This article is about MCI before it merged with WorldCom. For other uses, see MCI. MCI Communications was an American telecommunications company that was instrumental in legal and regulatory changes that led to the breakup of the AT&T monopoly of American telephony and Corp. lend their collection muscle by including charges from 1-900 calls in monthly phone bills. The payoff for the long-distance companies is millions in yearly revenue, Plakius said. AT&T, through its MultiQuest division, is reaping millions from the thousands of callers who want to hear about their futures. Plakius estimated AT&T controls 60 percent of the billion-dollar 1-900 industry. MCI (1) (Media Control Interface) A high-level programming interface from Microsoft and IBM for controlling multimedia devices. It provides commands and functions to open, play and close the device. (2) (Microwave Communications Inc. controls about 20 percent, he said, with smaller companies controlling the rest. But long-distance companies will not reveal exactly how much money the psychic networks bring in when compared to other 1-900 services. ``We consider that proprietary information,'' said Janet Wyles, a spokeswoman for AT&T's MultiQuest. Wyles wouldn't say which services AT&T is working with, although analysts say the company has worked with several, including the Psychic Friends Network. MCI spokesman Paul Adams Paul Adams is the name of:
``Typically we don't reveal what customers we have,'' Adams said. ``We do have companies like that as customers.'' But even though exact numbers are unavailable from long-distance carriers and from the privately owned and operated networks themselves, it's clear that pay-per-call clairvoyance is a big commodity, with the Psychic Friends Network leading the way. Founded in 1990, the Psychic Friends Network brings in about $100 million per year, said Richard Dworman, editor of the Infomercial in·fo·mer·cial also in·for·mer·cial n. A relatively long commercial in the format of a television program. [info(rmation) + (com)mercial.] Noun 1. Marketing Report, a monthly industry publication. Psychic Friends Network is controlled by the Pikesville, Md.-based Inphomation Communications Inc., which produces late-night infomercials featuring Dionne Warwick. ``The thing took off like a rocket; it was at the right place at the right time,'' Dworman said of Psychic Friends, which fields between 7,500 and 10,000 calls daily. The network's founder, entrepreneur Michael Lasky, has done well enough financially that he paid $500,000 for the baseball that slugger Eddie Murray
``We were the first to do it right,'' said Robert Hoffman, senior producer at Inphomation Communications. Lasky couldn't be reached for comment. The second-largest network, Psychic Readers Network, makes about $50 million in yearly revenue, Dworman said. Another service, Your Psychic Experience, has between $35 million and $40 million in annual revenue, he estimated. Are the psychic lines helping people or preying on them? Dworman, who writes about the infomercial industry for a living, says they are walking a fine line. ``You are dealing with two paradoxical goals,'' Dworman said of the psychic services. ``One is to protect yourself legally and the other is to entice people to call.'' To wit, one such commercial begins with this glittering glit·ter n. 1. A sparkling or glistening light. 2. Brilliant or showy, often superficial attractiveness. 3. Small pieces of light-reflecting decorative material. intr.v. testimonial from Nichelle Nichols Nichelle Nichols (born Grace Nichols on December 28 1932) is an American singer, actress, and voice actress. She sang with Duke Ellington and Lionel Hampton before turning to acting. , who played Lt. Uhura on the original ``Star Trek'' TV series: ``George Bloom called, and he won a fortune in the Florida State Lottery A game of chance operated by a state government. Generally a lottery offers a person the chance to win a prize in exchange for something of lesser value. Most lotteries offer a large cash prize, and the chance to win the cash prize is typically available for one dollar. .'' Because they are protected by the First Amendment, the psychic lines can urge people to ``just pick up the phone,'' as long as they also say the service is for entertainment only. The psychic lines are required to display their rates in their advertisements. Callers initially are not charged, but are warned that if they continue the call, they'll have to pay for it. Some callers may end up with phone bills they can't afford. But executives like Hoffman at Inphomation Communications aren't concerned, as long as the Psychic Friends Network itself avoids scrutiny and the phone calls keep coming in. ``No one is holding a gun to their head,'' Hoffman said of callers. For Desjardins and her friends, the temptation proved too much. The young women, who made the calls last year from a friend's house, were arrested on larceny larceny, in law, the unlawful taking and carrying away of the property of another, with intent to deprive the owner of its use or to appropriate it to the use of the perpetrator or of someone else. charges after the friend saw his gargantuan gar·gan·tu·an adj. Of immense size, volume, or capacity; gigantic. See Synonyms at enormous. gargantuan Adjective huge or enormous [after Gargantua, a giant in Rabelais' phone bill and decided to turn the matter over to police. The charges were dropped when a payment arrangement was made in court. But even with the charges dismissed, the humiliation will last: ``It made me feel like a real jerk,'' said Desjardins' friend Jennifer Garner Jennifer Anne Garner[1] (born April 17, 1972) is an Emmy-nominated and Golden Globe- and SAG Award-winning American actress. She first became known for her role as CIA agent Sydney Bristow on TV's Alias. of the ordeal. ``The psychics were just telling us what we wanted to hear. It was really stupid.'' Psychiatrists say the popularity of the psychic phone lines is not surprising. ``If you consider that 25 percent of Americans believe in angels, it's a logical consequence,'' said Arthur Warwick of the University of Maryland. ``There's no angel hotline and this is the next best thing.'' CAPTION(S): Photo Photo: No caption (Person looking into a crystal ball while talking on the telephone) AP Illustration |
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