
Sylvia Browne, the controversial TV psychic infamous for her inaccurate predictions, has become a viral sensation once more, years after her death. Best remembered for her appearances on The Montel Williams Show and Larry King Live, Browne built a multimillion-dollar empire despite repeated public debunking.
Who Was Sylvia Browne?
Born in 1936 in Kansas City as Sylvia Celeste Shoemaker, Browne claimed to have psychic visions from the tender age of three. Before pursuing a career as a psychic, she spent 18 years teaching at a Catholic school. In 1973, she made her transition into being a professional “trance medium.”
By the 1980s, Browne had crafted an image that made her a media magnet: a gravelly-voiced, platinum-blonde personality with a blunt sense of humor and ostentatious appearance. Her prominence peaked in the 1990s, thanks to regular appearances on talk shows and late-night radio programs focused on paranormal phenomena.
Her psychic enterprise extended well beyond TV appearances. Browne authored bestselling books, charged $750 for 30-minute phone consultations, hosted cruises for fans, operated a gnostic church, and even delved into a gold-mining venture that led to her 1992 conviction for securities fraud.
Infamous Predictions and Public Backlash
Browne’s reputation took a severe hit due to highly publicized incorrect predictions, particularly involving missing children and grieving families. Among the most notorious was her 2004 statement to Louwanna Miller, whose daughter Amanda Berry had gone missing. Browne assured Miller that Berry was deceased, a claim that proved devastatingly false when Amanda was found alive in 2013 after years of captivity.
Another infamous moment involved Shawn Hornbeck, a Missouri boy missing since 2002. On national television, Browne told his parents he had been abducted and killed by a man with dreadlocks. In a stunning twist, Shawn was found alive in 2007; his kidnapper was a clean-shaven white man.
Critics, including her ex-husband Gary Dufresne, heavily condemned her alleged exploitation of vulnerable people. Browne’s engagements with the skeptical community further undermined her credibility. She publicly accepted, then dodged, retired magician James Randi’s $1 million challenge to scientifically prove her abilities. A later study examining 115 of her predictions on missing persons and murder cases revealed that none were correct.
From Controversy to Viral Fame
Despite her death in 2013, Browne’s legacy continues to polarize audiences. During the COVID-19 pandemic, a resurfaced quote from her 2004 book End of Days about a “pneumonia-like illness in 2020” sparked renewed interest, with even Kim Kardashian sharing her words.
More recently, social media users have circulated videos of Browne’s often outrageous statements, sparking laughter and disbelief. Clips of her confidently giving absurd answers—like telling a woman her deceased boyfriend was “in water” only to learn he died on 9/11 as a firefighter—have contributed to her viral notoriety.
Though Sylvia Browne remains a divisive figure, her influence on pop culture and the psychic industry is undeniable. Whether remembered as a media-savvy psychic or a deeply flawed figure, she continues to spark debate long after her death.