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- Collection:
- WSB-TV Newsfilm Collection
- Title:
- Series of WSB newsfilm clips of reporter Hal Suit interviewing Jeane Dixon and Dixon's comments on her life and work, Georgia politics, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and the nature of her predictions, Washington, D.C., 1969 October 25
- Creator:
- WSB-TV (Television station : Atlanta, Ga.)
- Contributor to Resource:
- Suit, Hal, 1922-1994
Dixon, Jeane - Date of Original:
- 1969-10-25
- Subject:
- Prophecies (Occultism)
Reincarnation - People:
- Dixon, Jeane--Prophecies
Suit, Hal, 1922-1994
Onassis, Jacqueline Kennedy, 1929-1994
Maddox, Lester, 1915-2003
Maddox, Virginia, 1918-1997 - Location:
- United States, District of Columbia, Washington, 38.89511, -77.03637
- Medium:
- moving images
news
unedited footage - Type:
- Moving Image
- Format:
- video/mp4
- Description:
- In this series of WSB newsfilm clips, possibly from Washington, D.C. on October 25, 1969, reporter Hal Suit interviews Jeane Dixon and she comments on her life and work, Georgia politics, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and the nature of her predictions.
The clips begin with a shot of reporter Hal Suit, who is positioned in front of a blue curtain. Suit says, "Ms. Dixon, when you are being interviewed or when you're talking to a group of reporters, do you sometimes sense or can you sense that some of the individuals in the room believe you, while other individuals perhaps are skeptical, and there are some who are just out-and-out non-believers?" The clips cut to Jeane Dixon, who responds, "Well, to me, you see, I love the skeptics, because there is where my work begins. Now, sometime in your life, I don't know how I picked this up, but, I don't know, did you have an accident in your life, sort of a serious one? Well, that was destiny. And that would be - you could not help that. That would be -" From off camera, an unidentified male speaks to Ms. Dixon, but his response is not intelligible. Dixon continues, "No. That would be. Now, as a child if I would have seen you, I would say, in such and such a year, there is going to be - you're vulnerable. Now you are vulnerable, and you would be, and nobody could change that." From off camera, Suit says, "Someone did tell me this when I was a child. They specifically told me what was going to happen." Dixon says, "Yes, well that could be, that could be, and would be, and you cannot change that. That is, they picked up your channel. What the Lord meant for you, your life upon this earth, and you can't change that. And now that when you say the skeptics, those are the people I love because the other people, I have no work to do. These are the people, I would like to show them, to have them have an experience, just once, of the Lord touching them, the light of God within themselves. Now I want to tell you something that happened - my little secretary Miss Bremer was telling me. I have a little girl helping me, her name is Myra, and she was an athiest. Very, very, very skeptical. So she was out swimming and the swimming season was over and she was about to drown, and she was, 'Oh, at least I know how I'm going.' You know, and she laughed about it, such and such higher power, but when she was going down for the final time, she felt a hand reach down and pick her up and talk to her. At that moment, she saw the power of the light of God. Today, all she wants to do is to help others to help themselves, like my work, and the skeptics, I just love them, because they're the ones where my work and my purpose is really, it can create dividends upon this earth." The clips cut to a shot of reporter Hal Suit, who asks, "Why is it that most of your predictions concern either national or international affairs? Is it because you live in Washington D.C.?" The clips cut to Dixon. She replies, "No, I wanted to tell you, you know, I've had that asked for me. Those are the only things that make headlines in newspapers. Those are the only things that the news people are interested in. No, I specialize, actually, in helping children to help themselves and people to help themselves to find their way, their purpose in life, and I believe my purpose in life is helping others find their purpose. But when I talk to people, say that I gave you something about your life that you were going to do, it would never make headlines. The news wouldn't - maybe it would, the news may be interested in you because you are a news person, and of your station, but it wouldn't make international news, and it seems that these are the only things. And you see when you call this - they're revelations, and in a revelation, which has nothing to do with the psychic world, or with extra-sensory perception, or the psychic phenomena, that has always to do with people of international consequences, of international affairs, and that affect the whole world in general, but those are few and far apart. That was the assassination of President Kennedy, the Ecumenical Council, the child born at the east. I remember those are given very, very seldom and they're years and years apart, and they always are - they make history, the history books, and they affect people internationally, and I think that is the reason. No, not the fact that I live in Washington, because I didn't always live in Washington."
The clips cut back to reporter Hal Suit, who asks, "Ms. Dixon, have you had any vibrations or have you attempted to evaluate the political situation here in Georgia? For example, it's been said by the Governor that his wife might run for his post in 1970. Have you had any vibrations along these lines as to what kind of luck that Mrs. Virginia Maddox might have, or do you know if she's going to run?" The clips cut to Jeane Dixon. She replies, "I haven't been asked that question. I haven't given that thought, but, if my secretary's here, you write that down, and then I will try to get you the answer to that if I can get it. Sometimes I can and sometimes I can't, but I will meditate on it, because I think there are very positive people, and when they're positive people, it is easier for me. Because people have asked me, how come you get so much on Russia and the Kennedys? Because they had a purpose, they had a plan, and they had it all laid out for years to come, and it was not difficult to pick up such a powerful plan, such a powerful channel." The clips cut to Hal Suit. Suit asks, "Have you had any specific vibrations or have you attempted to make any effort to determine the future of the former Mrs. Kennedy and her new husband, Aristotle Onassis?" The clips cut to Jeane Dixon, who responds, "It's a marriage of harmony, and I will say this, that Jackie Kennedy has, actually has a fulfillment of her life as she wishes it. Because I have great admiration for Jacqueline Kennedy, and I'll tell you why. She - there's an old saying, 'Know thyself, and to thine own self be true and as sure as the night follows the day, thy cannot be false to any man.' Jacqueline Kennedy has never represented herself as she wanted to be queen of America. She's never represented herself that she's going to go out and do a great deal of charity work. Jacqueline Kennedy has always had her own will and she did as she wished, as she saw, and remember, the difficult time President Kennedy had her - had with her when she lost her first baby and [unintelligible] Christina, and they had to have come back. So she is to be admired. If we'd all be true to ourselves then no one could criticize us, could we? She's minding her own business. She isn't hurting anyone. Oh, she let us down in our minds, now that we placed her on that pedestal, but then remember, in the 1964 casts that I wrote, Ruth Montgomery wrote - you can look this up, and it states, I meditated on her, and I said yes, Jacqueline Kennedy, if there is such a thing as reincarnation, the way some people look at it, not the way I look at it, but the way I look at it, too, then she was a queen in a former life, because she would like to be a very powerful queen, and she will put stars in her husband's crown, but she will tarnish her own, as far as we people are concerned. Now, you see as far as the Lord is concerned, maybe she's doing very well, because she's not being false to herself at all. She doesn't say she does a lot of charity work, so she doesn't have to make good. You see, I say I do charity work, so I've got to do it, and I go out and do it."
The clips cut to reporter Hal Suit. He says, "In your book and in other articles that have been written about you there's some events or there are a number of events that took place early in your life that indicated that you had this talent when you were very, very young. When did you first become aware that you had a sense that other individuals do not have?" Dixon says, "Well, I had a German governess and I did not speak English until I was eight years of age, and that's the reason I have trouble with my English today. I think in German and I have to translate all of the time, and that makes it a little difficult. But when I learned to talk, I'd put my hands over my eyes and tell people things that would happen. I'd touch them and tell them things that would happen would happen. And then, I told about a letter arriving from Europe that was edged in black, and I asked for it, and it hadn't arrived as yet, but it did about a fortnight, and it was the death of my grandfather." From off camera, Suit asks, "Did you consciously realize what you were doing at that age?" Dixon says, "Oh no, no, no, no. To me, I'm in harmony with what the Lord wanted me to do, and I still feel that way. I feel as though we have to earn our keep as the Bible says, by the sweat of our brow, and I believe in working, and I believe in helping others to help themselves, and to me, I count my blessings morning, noon and night." The clips cut to Hal Suit, who says, "In going back to your book, I seem to sense that you find it necessary to actually have personal contact, or at least be in the presence of, or perhaps touch someone, an individual in order to have some understanding of the events in his life or her life or what might possibly happen to them. Is this true?" The clips cut back to Dixon, and she says, "No, not always, no, no, no. It is not necessary to all, no. When somebody who is quite a negative person, then it helps me, not having to work so hard and pull, and you see, a revelation gives you great, great spiritual strength and great love for humanity, but, when you meditate on people, then you have to pull in their channel. See there is, our point of communication is through the holy trinity: the father, the son, and the holy ghost. We come from there and return to there. You have your individual challenge and now in your color, you have an aura, and your aura is not whites and things like that, although you have a light blue shirt on today. Your aura goes in, because I can see it around you at the moment, and it goes to golds and browns and any shade of blue from the lightest to the darkest, and, when you wear those colors, you'll have more of a friendly vibrations from people come. Do you not like browns and golds around you?" From off camera, Suit says, "Mostly I'm conservative, just so it's a dark color." Dixon says, "Yes, conservative. Yes, a dark color, that is right. You see, but that is your channel, and you come, we all come, and return to the holy trinity, and its the father and son and the holy ghost, the holy spirit. That is our soul." From off camera, Suit asks, "Well is it, we hear, perhaps, more of your predictions that indicate tragedies than we do of the good ones. Are impressions sort of split or is it just the news media predicts only your bad ones?" Dixon says, "Its the news media. I met someone from Newsweek who came over to interview me, and when he talked to me and I was telling him some things, he said, oh, he said, how misconstrued people can be about you, he says, and the image some people build up around you, because yours are good luck and happiness and to build up, not tragedies. But you see, its the news media that does that." The clips cut to Hal Suit, who says, "While primarily you're concerned with other people rather than yourself, and with events perhaps outside the scope of your own family, what about vibrations or whatever you call them that relate specifically to you? What about the ones that might indicate that something's going to happen to you as an individual? How would you react to this sort of situation?" The clips cut to Jeane Dixon. She says, "I have a great deal of faith and I think some of the captains of the airliners do, too, because quite often they say, 'We will have a wonderful flight, we'll land safely because Jeane Dixon is aboard." From off camera, Suit asks, "Well, have you ever had any indication or vibrations about yourself?" Dixon says, "Oh always, always, yes. I have five bad days every month that I have vibrations that are negative, but on those five days I will not travel. See, I make it sure."
Reporter: Suit, Hal, 1922-1994
Title supplied by cataloger.
Supporting information was taken from the following source: The Atlanta Constitution, Oct. 25, 1969:2T. Web. 21 May 2020. - Local Identifier:
- Clip number: wsbn39399
- External Identifiers:
- Metadata URL:
- https://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/news/id:wsbn39399
- Digital Object URL:
- https://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/news/id:wsbn39399
- IIIF manifest:
- https://dlg.usg.edu/record/ugabma_wsbn_wsbn39399/presentation/manifest.json
- Language:
- eng
- Bibliographic Citation (Cite As):
- Cite as: wsbn39399, Series of WSB newsfilm clips of reporter Hal Suit interviewing Jeane Dixon and Dixon's comments on her life and work, Georgia politics, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and the nature of her predictions, Washington, D.C., 1969 October 25, WSB-TV newsfilm collection, reel 0254, 12:35/24:09, Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection, The University of Georgia Libraries, Athens, Georgia
- Extent:
- 1 clip (about 11 mins., 34 secs.): color, sound ; 16 mm.
- Original Collection:
- Original found in the WSB-TV newsfilm collection.
- Holding Institution:
- Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection
- Rights:
-