Founder's Story podcast

Spencer Pratt Wins LA Mayor and Other Shocking Predictions From Famous Psychic | Ep. 403 with Craig Hamilton-Parker

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Daniel and Guest Host Nadja interview Craig Hamilton-Parker about how he developed his psychic practice, how he distinguishes intuition from opinion, and why he believes prediction is about probability, not destiny. Craig shares a bold call on the Los Angeles mayor race, then zooms out to discuss broader global tensions and what he sees as an approaching “pressure window” in the coming years. They also explore AI, consciousness, and Craig’s belief that periods of instability can trigger deeper questions about meaning and identity.

Key Discussion Points

Craig explains his background and how his work evolved from early experiences into public-facing predictions, plus the responsibility that comes with making specific calls. 
He shares his prediction that Spencer Pratt will be the next LA mayor, and the conversation examines why “off-script” authenticity can outperform traditional political playbooks. 
Craig outlines how he thinks about major world events as shifting probability paths, emphasizing that timing can be difficult and outcomes can change with collective decisions. 
They discuss current geopolitical flashpoints and Craig’s view of a heightened risk period that could peak around 2028, while still leaving room for de-escalation and course correction. 
On AI, Craig takes a tool-based view, arguing that it can amplify or destabilize humanity depending on how people use it, and he believes human meaning-making still matters most.

Takeaways

Predictions, in Craig’s view, are probability maps, not fate, and the most constructive stance is preparation without fatalism. 
People respond emotionally during uncertainty, which is why authentic, unpolished voices can rise fast in politics and media. 
If you consume prediction content, keep discernment: treat it as one input, not a replacement for decision-making and personal responsibility. 
AI may accelerate output and misinformation at the same time, making verification, calm thinking, and trusted relationships even more valuable.

Closing Thoughts

This episode is less about “believing or not believing” and more about how humans seek certainty in chaotic times. Craig Hamilton-Parker leaves listeners with a challenge: stay curious, stay grounded, and don’t outsource your agency to fear—whether it comes from news cycles, algorithms, or predictions.


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