Conference Clarity

18th August 2025

In lieu of my usual blathering, this week we have an update from our chair, Bronwyn, about our plans for our conferences this year and next:

A quick conference update. A huge thanks to the 64 people who answered our conference survey. 2026 will be the 40th anniversary of the NZ Skeptics, making it a milestone year for our organisation, so the committee feels that it is important that our 2026 conference celebrates skepticism in New Zealand, is fun for attendees, and is financially accessible.

We’ve decided, based on your feedback, that it’s prudent to halt our plans to run a 2025 conference, and redirect our energy and finances to the anniversary conference in 2026. Whether our guests will be the Skeptics Guide to the Universe or other well-known international skeptics, and exactly when in 2026 the conference will be held, are still a work in progress. We are waiting for August 2026 flights from the US to go on sale before we are able to make an informed decision.

The committee hopes to have an update for you all soon!

_Bronwyn Rideout

Chair, NZ Skeptics_

In this week’s newsletter, Katrina has written about the kinds of gadgets that MSN thinks she should be buying - and, having cast her skeptical eye over them, none of them appear to be the bargain they’re made out to be. Bronwyn and I have each written another article about The Telepathy Tapes (and tune in to our next podcast episode to hear us talking with a guest who has intimate knowledge of the podcast, as well as Facilitated Communication). And finally, we have the third of four chapters of John Maindonald’s excellent online resource about how to make sense of data without going awry.

Mark Honeychurch

Gadget Scams

Katrina Borthwick - 18 August 2025

Gadget Scams

Sometimes I get weird MSN 'News' landing pages that are chocka with adverts. One of the linked pages I saw recently was this one. It lists piles of gadgets that I apparently urgently need, and which are going to sell out soon. Being curious, I had a look.

Wham, Bam, Autism scams: The Telepathy Tapes Part 2

Bronwyn Rideout - 18 August 2025

Wham, Bam, Autism scams: The Telepathy Tapes Part 2

The Telepathy Tapes is a 10+ episode podcast series that was released in September 2024. Created and hosted by Ky Dickens, Season 1 is described as daring to… “explore the profound abilities of non-speakers with autism - individuals who have long been misunderstood and underestimated”. But Dickens doesn't content herself with the common trope of autistic savantism and instead goes full paranormal. Specifically, as the podcast name indicates, Dickens presents incidents of telepathy, but also astral projection (see episode 3), mediumship (see episode 2), talking to god (see episode 7), and pronosticating (see episode 5 and 7).

The Telepathy Tapes Talk Tracks Two: Back for More

Mark Honeychurch - 18 August 2025

The Telepathy Tapes Talk Tracks Two: Back for More

In episode 9 of the Telepathy Tapes' extra episodes, titled the Talk Tracks, host Ky Dickens has Adam Curry on to talk about the “science”, in an episode titled “The Science of Intuition: Consciousness, Intention, and the Edge of Reality”. According to Ky, dam is apparently an inventor and “deep thinker”, although in the episode he describes himself as an “armchair scientist” and “consciousness researcher” - although all I could find of his research online was a single paper on Google Scholar, where he is listed as the third author on a paper about retrocausation. Two websites I found that have profiles on him both listed many research papers, but none of the papers had his name attached to them, despite the fact that they were listed in one case on a website he owns, which sells an app he created (Entangled), and in the other case were listed on his profile page under a picture of him. So I'm left thinking that maybe he's not so much of a researcher after all. Although even if he had been an author on those papers, looking at the quality of them and the places they've been published (and many haven't been published anywhere) makes me think that it still wouldn't be that much of a flex.

Matters of consequence

John Maindonald - 18 August 2025

Matters of consequence

The MMR vaccine was developed for use in preventing measles, mumps, and rubella. Andrew Wakefield was the lead author of a study published in 1998, based on just twelve children, that claimed to find indications of a link between the MMR vaccine and autism. The journalist Brian Deer had a key role in identifying issues with the work, including fraudulent manipulation of the medical evidence.