These strategies can still be found in publications and other media products, even though the media landscape has fundamentally changed in the last two decades. They seem to be part of human psychology—strategies for simplifying life and coping mechanisms for dealing with ambiguity. A third strategy, used by the two prominent skeptics Arthur Reber and James Alcock (2019, 2020), which consists of completely ignoring scientifically collected data (“the data are irrelevant”), is ideological in nature and therefore does not belong to the realm of science. I do not believe that this has become a general strategy of downplaying the paranormal in media coverage outside the areas of ideological skepticism and esotericism.
Apart from these two general argumentation strategies, which are part of the skeptics’ “toolbox,” so much has changed in the media landscape that the results of my study are probably only applicable to the current situation to a limited extent. With the rise of online content, print media has lost much of its significance. Online media is published much more frequently, and audiences expect news at short intervals, which inevitably limits the time available for research. While AI can be helpful as a research tool in this context, it also increases the likelihood of errors. This is especially true for topics that fall outside the mainstream of science. In this case, it is not ideological reasons that lead to a distorted representation, but simply the power of the masses, which is shaped by prevailing opinion and prevails for statistical reasons, since LLMs operate on this principle.
However, this is actually the less serious aspect of the possible negative consequences of using AI when it is used in media coverage of anomalistic or parapsychological topics. It has become easier than ever to fabricate data on a large scale and to produce and spread false information. The scientific community now is threatened by AI-generated studies, expert reports, and publications (Northwestern University, 2026).
Anomalistics and parapsychology have faced the problem of delegitimization from the very beginning through the production of pseudo-phenomena by skeptics or pranksters (Mayer & Schetsche, 2016). The simple argument, in this regard, is: if the supposedly anomalous phenomena can be produced using conventional means, then they are not anomalies and there is no need to investigate them further. Yet, the number of these fake productions (crop circles, UFOs, bent spoons) remained manageable, and the forgers often confessed to their actions, as they believed they were acting out of noble motives (the “brights” have to enlighten the “fools”).
With the increasingly accessible possibilities of editing visual media via software in such a way that the manipulations are difficult to detect, the problem of falsified data has reached a new level. Photographic and film material was invalidated as evidence to prove the existence of anomalies. The ubiquitous use of AI has exacerbated the problem exponentially. As a music lover, I was initially thrilled, and then shocked, when I came across numerous supposedly “rediscovered recordings” of blues singers on YouTube that sounded amazing but turned out to be AI-generated. The shocking moment came when I stumbled upon “rediscovered recordings” of the historically real musician Memphis Minnie, which had also been generated by an AI. Such products, created for purely commercial reasons (clickbaiting), distort our cultural history and thus fundamentally endanger our culture.
What would happen if we suddenly stumbled upon experimental parapsychological studies with significant results and remarkable effect sizes, whose authors were previously unknown to us? Would we believe them? How would skeptics and the scientific mainstream react? At least in this respect, it is an advantage that the research community in anomalistics and parapsychology is small enough to keep track of and that hardly anyone chooses these fields of research with the aim of pursuing an academic career.
But this is just a side note regarding the uncertainty that the use and possibilities—both positive and negative—of AI bring with them. The emergence of such powerful, culture-transforming new factors within a very short period of time, the acceleration of information generation and dissemination through online media, the loss of control over information flows due to the emergence and use of social networks, and the readily available means of creating fake news and false realities through AI exceed humanity’s ability to realistically predict how social and cultural developments will be reflected in the media, not to mention their specific impact on media coverage of parapsychological and anomalistic topics.