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June 10, 2024 16 mins

Guest Host Connie Willis and Remote Viewer Shane Ivie discuss using remote viewing to gamble on horse racing.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
You're back on Coast to Coast AM. Hello, thank you
so much for being here. My name is Connie Willis.
We're here along with Shane Ivy, the originator of his
trademarked application of remote viewing operational handicapping. Where where do
we find you, Shane? I know we can on Facebook,
but what's the website that we can look for you

(00:27):
and learn more about you?

Speaker 3 (00:30):
Well? At the moment, I have a new role with
a new organization named Center Lane Project, and that has
been put together to preserve and strengthen and expand the
core principles of CRV itself as it was taught by
how put Off in Inglo Swan. The advisors are, you know,

(00:53):
some of the great Tom McNair, Plit Smith, Bill Ray,
Let's skip Batwater and there's a great board of director.
I am the outreach associate, So this is a great
way to start out outreach the public.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
Mother.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
Look know I'm here and my email is there if
you go to about if you go to Center Lane
dash RV dot org. I think the link is in
my bio here on Coast to coast a m. Go
to the about page and you'll find me. You could
hit the email and ask any questions you like.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
Okay, that's center lane dash r v dot org Center
Lane dash r v dot org. That dash always messes
people up. They'll be like, what what a dash?

Speaker 3 (01:42):
What to google and put in center Lane project right now,
the second one down below the CIA documents so.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Perfect, right up top perfect. Okay, So you were getting
into it. You were telling us all about the horse
racing and all the all the different things happening. And
and by the way, so far since with the break
and you're already talking about everything. I've gotten emails, I've
gotten texts there they they want to buy your pictures,

(02:14):
and it's it's not it's not that way. It's not
that way, right, It's not about the pictures. Even you
when you draw the pictures and anybody does remote viewing you.
You do draw pictures, but usually you don't know the
pictures until afterwards you get the feedback and go, oh,
that's what that meant.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
But many times there's these uncanny summer Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
It's so cool.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
P seven's man, they're the best in the world. Let
me tell you. Those are like pretty awesome too. So
so let's get back to learning from you. And by
the way you have marked, you have trademarked your remote
viewing is operational handicapping?

Speaker 4 (03:01):
Handicapping? Is that right handicap?

Speaker 3 (03:04):
Using remote remote viewing operationally to handicap or horse race.
I've always called it operational handicapping. I even call it,
you know, op cap. I'm going to do an opcap,
you know, and at some point I thought I should
probably uh trademark this, uh, this application. You know, this
is not a method. You know, the methods are cr

(03:25):
V and t r V, e r V and such.
You know, applications are like ARV. It's how you apply
remote viewing to how you're going to get a binary question. Uh.
And then operational handicapping is it's it's it's an application
for sports betting. Basically, I'm applying remote view into sports betting.
And as a matter of fact, it's under the US

(03:49):
Patent and Trademark Office, it's categorized as education, uh, with
remote viewing towards sports prediction anderating sports predictions as well.
So I generally, as far as the USTPO is concerned
by my home sports and remote viewing but you know,

(04:09):
I'm not you know, I just don't want people to
use the name unless I sign off on it, you
know what I mean. It's not I'm trying to, you know,
point of the market on this thing. Anybody could remote
view and you know, if you know about remote vieing,
know a lot of folks do. They've done their homework. Really,
I'm just riding a queue at the top of the page.

(04:31):
We don't use envelopes anymore. And the practice targets. I
found out that as long as I stayed blind to
the race. You know, let's think about the next Kentucky Derby.
Neither one of us know what horses will be in
that race, but we could remote vie the next Kentucky
Derby and then look at the entries and then there
you go, and then you can make your bet and

(04:51):
then you get your feedback after the race is actualized.
So with that, I've shortened the amount of time takes
to do these sessions. I could do these sessions within
a half hour of the race. Do the session in
fifteen minutes, look at the entries, put a bet on,
watch the race, cash a ticket, and it's fast.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
So the other day speak so let's let's let's let's
talk about this for a minute here. So the other
day you you came on to me doing a show
and you because the Belmont Stakes was coming up, and
what was this? This was Thursday night. How long did

(05:34):
you do the target? Fifteen minutes?

Speaker 4 (05:36):
Twenty thirty? You didn't have much time. I like to
talk to you that day too.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
I think even yeah, it was, it was. It was
pretty pretty quick, and I did a CRV on it.
I do more controlled remote viewing since I've learned with Paul.
I began my training with ten in twenty fifteen minutes,
taking it to advanced. So now I tend to use
CRV when I really want to dwell in the signal.

(06:04):
You know TRV that Ed Dames Metton is morbid. It's
an interrogation of the signal. You go through it and
then you kind of do it like kind of broken record.
You skip and you go to another aspect, another aspect,
another aspect. But with CRV, and I knew a little
bit about the other two Triple Current races, the Kentucky
Derby and the Preakness. So that's front loading right there.

(06:27):
I knew about I knew about C's de Gray, and
I knew about Mystic Dan I even you know, I
forgot about Sierra Leone, but yeah, he was in there too,
so I knew about these horses. I really had to
just relax into the process and CRV. You could really
feel the artists and the psychic that INGO was in
that process because you sort of dwell on the signal.

(06:51):
And as I began going through at many more pages
than I normally do, it took about maybe a forty
minute session and I got the.

Speaker 2 (07:01):
Wait a minute after forty minutes and checking it out
and looking at the names, YE came up.

Speaker 4 (07:14):
With mindframe.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
That's right. They went with mind frame. And this session
wasn't It wasn't my best. It wasn't the most vivid,
but there was some sort of word association, like sort
of the analogy that I was talking about, I thought
it was, and now it's to a frame like on
the picture or looking underneath the car at the car frame,
or even a computer. I had some ideas about mainframe,

(07:39):
so I went with mindframe. The horse on the Morning
Line was a favorite, so it wasn't really that much
of a stretch. Some of people believed in them, but
there were the other horses that won the other two
races that were all in this race, they had a
chance too, and they had better odds, and they didn't
have better odds. I thought that they might have had
a better chance, but I went with mind Frame, and

(08:02):
I made sure to let everybody know that it was
for entertainment purposes only because it was a session that
I probably didn't bet on it. Actually just sat and
enjoyed the race yesterday.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
But do you do you play it kind of safe
to where you're like, okay, from what I'm seeing, from
what I'm gathering, because because you you know, you gave
us this before it ran, and you're like, I'm just
I'm going to go ahead and do this, which took
a lot of courage to do that and live. But
you you said I'm going to go ahead and do
go with mind frame, and it's not. I mean again,

(08:39):
you never know until feedback. That's when you really see
everything so clearly obviously, but you went with that. It
came in second. But do you when you play it,
do you say, okay, you know what, I'm going to
bed it across the board so then you know it
doesn't have to be first or second or third year year.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
Winning money sometimes sometimes you know, we had a string
of great successes early on when I was doing this,
I'd have these winners that were uncanny, they looked wonderful,
and then I would have sessions that looked great as well,
and then the horse would just come up short. And
so it was a mist and it was my wife

(09:22):
had said, well, at least the horse came in second,
and I realized that it was displacement that was happening.
Sometimes our subconscious can't come up with a name in
graphic forms, so you'll get the next best thing. And
so I began to place put show money on horses
to at least come in third, and over time, over

(09:44):
hundreds and hundreds of sessions and doing graphs and spreadsheets
and stuff, I get the winner most of the time,
followed by place and then a little bit less by show.
So we are getting the winner most of the time.
But it does displace since I can't tell how the
horse is going to come in. That's the deficiency and
operational handicapping. I will bet show money and then a

(10:07):
little bit less on place sometimes, and then I'll do
like a little sawback where you do this one place,
show a thing a little bit on when a little
bit more on place, and a whole lot more show.
And it turns out well when it does turn out.
But I've become very careful, very patient, because this repeats itself.

(10:28):
I don't have to bet on every single session I do,
so when I get something that looks really, really good,
I can make a move on it.

Speaker 2 (10:40):
So you know, I'm from Kentucky, so I'm used to
seeing the horses, and that's what I'm used to. When
I moved to Florida, it was really weird for me
to see people betting dogs and going to the dog races.

Speaker 4 (10:52):
I thought I thought it was a joke. I did
not think it was real, you know, because I had
no idea.

Speaker 2 (10:59):
But it was a real deal and people were serious
about it, just like you know, going to Churchill Downs
and so it was amazing to me. So obviously yours
can head right on over to the dogs.

Speaker 3 (11:10):
Yeah, I think I could be wrong about to say
I think they outlawed that in Florida.

Speaker 4 (11:15):
Good day. I oh, it's been a while years ago.

Speaker 3 (11:18):
Yeah really, Yeah, this permutel betting as well, you know,
Perramichel wagering, and I sure I would. I would imagine
you could do the same thing with Yeah, if you
just did hermouling, you know, next, you know, next Fido
steaks slash optimum leaning dog, you get the same thing.

Speaker 4 (11:38):
Yes, you know.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
I wonder how well we would do if you and
I did it side by side with each other, and
like we could put a whole bunch of races together
and I would pick, I would pick, and then you
would pick using your what what you do, and I
could pick by you know, me just pulling out the
old ENTENTI way. We all have our special ways. When

(12:02):
you grow up with the derby, I think I would
just be that Yeah, sometimes it would just be oh
I like that name, or oh I like that color,
I like the jockeys pattern.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
So you know, the.

Speaker 3 (12:16):
Haunch and the gut feeling is alive and well to
track it really it really is.

Speaker 4 (12:20):
It is it is.

Speaker 3 (12:23):
You know, I think that conventional handicapping naturally, you know,
nothing's going to take place of that. I mean, that's
you know, there's many different angles I'm looking at these
horses generally speaking, though since I remote view, I can't
follow horse racing because then I'll be front loaded with
all these names.

Speaker 4 (12:43):
That's right.

Speaker 3 (12:44):
Yeah, So I have to come into a cold you know,
I not have to not know anything about the horses
in the race. And I'll go months without doing a
horse race just to let everything cycle through and horses
fill throughout to the different circuits, and then I'll come
back at it. So when I feel confident, I don't
remote view one race after the other after the other

(13:06):
after the other, because I think the process degrades a bit.
But I have hit daily doubles by doing a race
the night before and then it was a stakes race.
So it's really easy to write a search term instead
of writing, you know, next race one. You come up
with a race that has a name, I Kentucky Derby, Freakness,

(13:30):
the Belmont Steaks, the Peggatsu's Invitation, or what have you.
So you name it. And I did a race the
night before and erase the day of, and I got
winners on both of those races. So I have hit
a daily double on consecutive races. I think with remote viewing,
with my angle, with the operational handicapping and betting and

(13:51):
show getting a horse that's going to be in the money,
I think a team of remote viewers that do ARV
can probably determine what position that horse comes in. It's
only three choices. So there's ways I think with remote
view into conquer horse racing. Honestly, I don't mean, like,
you know, you know, take all the money out of

(14:11):
it so nobody can do it anymore, because that would
that would probably get me in trouble. But I do
think that people could probably make an impact. You know,
there's a lot of potential in this. I don't do
two dollars bets anymore. I've done as much as you know,
a couple hundred bucks and things like that. So it

(14:31):
comes down to the pool. So we know horse racing
that we're all putting this money in for the horse.
All that money pulls up and if you get into
a race that is not you know, a really big race,
there's only a couple couple thousand dollars in the pool,
and if you come at it with two thousand bucks,
you've actually just drained the horses odds. So you're risking

(14:53):
more money than you should. These big races, you know
Kentucky Derby and the one that just happened yesterday to Belmont.
I mean mind Frame had one hundreds and thousands of
dollars in the show pool. Could I could have bet,
you know, hypothetically, twenty grand and it wouldn't have affected
the horse's odds in any way. So yeah, getting together

(15:16):
and doing racing sounds fun.

Speaker 4 (15:19):
So what is your success rate?

Speaker 3 (15:22):
My running rate is fifty four to fifty seven percent,
and that's honest. I estimated during my twenty sixteen presentation
just by stacking all of my sessions, counting hits and misses.
It was a pretty good guestimation because when I finally
got to a spreadsheet and looked at this thing on

(15:43):
the graph, that was about fifty seven percent. And even
in a run of that, it was a small sample.
It was one hundred races, you know that I decided
to dedicate it to really really keeping track of this
very very well and really watch this thing. In small runs,
I was at seventy percent, So it's all about being patient.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at
one am Eastern and go to Coast to cooastam dot
com for more

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