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November 7, 2025 19 mins

George Noory and remote viewer Michelle Freed explore her ability to send her consciousness to distant locations and observe people and events, how anyone can be trained to enhance their own remote viewing skills, and if it's possible to remote view events in the past or even in the future.

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

Speaker 2 (00:04):
And welcome back to Coast to Coast George Nori with you.
Michelle Fried is a certified remote viewer and instructor with
emphasis and controlled remote viewing. She has completed programs through
organizations like app Right, Hemisphere and Intuitive Specialists. Has received
additional training from Joe mcmonico. Michelle is an active member

(00:25):
of the International Research Vehicles of the Association and has
conducted notable research in the field of remote viewing. Her
website is linked up at Coast tocoastdam dot com. Michelle,
welcome back.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
Oh it's great to be here. How are you.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
Doing all good? How did you get involved in remote
viewing in the first place.

Speaker 3 (00:49):
It was a long time ago. I think I want
I live in Chicago, and uh people, there's not a
ton of people here that are open to like psychic abilities.
There's not a lot of things here, and so I
was thinking of trying to do something that was spiritual

(01:11):
or something I can help people with. So I took
a hypnosis class and became a hip there well, you know,
doing hypnosis for people and stuff like that, and then
started getting introduced into remote viewing, and I really really

(01:32):
liked it because there is this kind of a lightly
based science or it was documented and you could do
experiments with it. And I see myself as a skeptical believer,
so so it really resonated with me.

Speaker 2 (01:48):
You think, Michelle, we were all born with remote viewing techniques.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
Yes, I well, not techniques, but the ability to remote view.
It's it's similar to like when you have a gut feeling,
you know. I was giving a talk to the Oklahoma
Police Department, and you know, you can't walk into the
Oklahoma Police Department and talk about psychic abilities, so you

(02:16):
have to use words that they're going to like or
feel comfortable with. So I used an example of saying,
like when you follow your intuition or your gut feeling
about something, and they were like, yeah, yeah, we know,
So that's really what you're doing in remote viewing or
really any kind of these abilities.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
I'm still baffled how the government got into it and
then got out of it. I don't know why they
got out of it.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Do you.

Speaker 3 (02:45):
Well. I mean I hear a bunch of rumors and
things like that, but I think that I think that
it isn't one hundred percent reliable. We're not there yet.
And one of the reasons that I believe it is
has something to do with how our left brain works

(03:05):
and how our right brain works, and our left brain
kind of pulls us away from those kind of psychic abilities.
So the left brain is focused on patterns and things
that make sense and things that are subjective to you.
And in remote viewing, you don't want to be like that.

(03:26):
You want to just kind of use your sensories and
use that to guide you. And when you're in your
subconscious or unconscious part of your mind, that's where you're
starting to tune in to what things feel like or
things that you perceive or anything like that. So I

(03:48):
think that until we can manage the left brain and
the right brain, we're going to struggle with the accuracy.
But there's so many people I think a lot of practice. Yes,
I think we'll blow through the ceiling and be able
to do this more. You know, we're just babies right

(04:08):
now in this area.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
Would you encourage people who want to learn remote viewing
to jump in and do that, I.

Speaker 3 (04:17):
Would, because there's you know, things are kind of changing
from you know, the kind of military or espionage area
and now becoming something that is more personalized. Things that
you can do to help improve yourself. There's things that
you can do in medapps. There's fun ways to make money,

(04:42):
and there are you know, you can remote view pretty
much anything mysteries. I had people in my class remote
viewing the three I at lists because I was like, hey,
what is that thing? So we could do that too.
We do crimes, we help police departments, cold cases, all

(05:05):
those things.

Speaker 2 (05:07):
What did most of your students say about three eye atlas?

Speaker 3 (05:11):
Well? So what it? So? The question I asked them
was the odds they didn't know that they were remote
viewing this. They were completely blind. I just gave them
a number. But the secret question that they didn't get
until they were done with their sessions was sketch and

(05:31):
describe what is known the object known as a three
I atlas? Is it man made or natural or something else? Okay,
So they never saw that till they and a lot
of them were describing. They were describing something that was

(05:52):
man made and had some kind of biological connected to it.
And they were also getting like signals, and I think
I heard somebody report that they were getting some signals
from it too, so yeah, it was very interesting.

Speaker 2 (06:10):
I had not heard about the signals. But it's changing.
It's like complexity and it's speed and everything else.

Speaker 1 (06:17):
It's weird.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
Yeah, it's very weird. It's something that comes from interstellar
so it's not you know, it could be coming even
from another galaxy. We don't know, and it could have
a whole different you know. I think it said that
it's made of nickel instead of iron, which is our

(06:39):
solar system is used to iron and not very much nickel.
So there's a lot of weird things about it.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
What would you say, Michelle, are some of the benefits
of remote viewing?

Speaker 1 (06:54):
Why do it?

Speaker 3 (06:55):
Well? I think that when you have questions about things,
it can really help you personally. There is a kind
of remote viewing that is called associative remote viewing, and
what we do with that is we use a binary target.
So if you want, say you were offered a job

(07:18):
in another state, you can remote view if you should
stay in your own state or take the job in
the other state, so it could help you personally. A
couple times I had a target which was what kinds
of foods? Foods should Michelle stay away from? And I

(07:40):
came up with like GMOs. And keep in mind that
we don't know what the question is. So someone just said, hey, Michelle,
I have a practice for you, and it ended up
being what foods should Michelle stay away from. Another example
is when I was moving to California. I actually somebody

(08:06):
for fun gave me a target to describe the house
I was going to live in live in in California,
and I literally drew like a map of where I
was between these two big mountains, and so it was
really cool, and a body of water was in a
certain place, and so it was almost like I drew

(08:27):
a map of the area where we actually ended up moving.
And then there's other reasons because I worked with Homeland
Security and we in nineteen twenty nineteen, we were asked
to remote view something. We didn't know what it was

(08:50):
till the end, and it was they wanted to know
the top threats of the twenty twenty Olympics. So I
basically put in my session. I was talking about a
computer virus and going on about that, and then some

(09:11):
kind of you know, like there was destruction and things
all over the place, and I thought maybe a storm
or something. I don't know. But then years later I
started thinking about that session and I'm like, wait, I
said computer virus, but it was a different virus. And

(09:35):
I was like really blown away by my own session,
of course, but I you know that is that is
an example of how we can sort of be off,
you know, where I was perceiving a virus, but in
twenty nineteen, the furthest thing from my mind was a
bacterial or you know, any kind of virus of any

(09:58):
sort like that. I only allocate it to a computer.
And so that's when your left brain comes in and
tries to kind of dominate the session and say, well,
you know, it's a it's a computer virus. So that's
that's why we're not quite there yet.

Speaker 2 (10:18):
What has been one of your best students in terms
of how they grasp remote viewing? Did they pick it
up really fast? Were they already good?

Speaker 3 (10:28):
I think that people. I have a lot of good,
really good remote viewers. We get calls all the time
to hire us to look at things, and so I
have like my top team and they're fantastic. And I
ask myself, like, what makes a good remote viewer? And

(10:50):
it's not that you have to be right all the time.
But it's the fact that you can kind of walk
into a session and not be a perfectionist, not be
someone who is like I have to get this right.
It's somebody that can really fly free while they're doing
this session and just tap into their subconscious and allow

(11:13):
the information to come in rather than trying to force
information to come or work at it or anything like that.
So the people that more have kind of like they
can let go of their ego and things like that
seem to do so much better in remote viewing.

Speaker 2 (11:33):
In terms of students, how long do you think it
takes to learn remote viewing if you don't know much
about it?

Speaker 3 (11:40):
So I have a six week course and by the
end of the course they're ready to be operational. So yeah,
they just have to the kind of controlled remote viewing
that I'm talking about, which is a protocol that's basically
they're really just learning the steps. I guess that are

(12:04):
the phases that we go through, you know, like set
up your paper like this, and do like this and uh,
and then we just remind them also about connecting their
mind and their body and sensing. So a lot of
that stuff are things that we don't do every day
in life. Like you know, if we're eating food, a

(12:27):
lot of times we're not tasting the food. We're just shoveling,
shoveling it down our mouths. But we're I'm giving them
exercises where they spend the day, you know, really taste
your food and smell your smells, and notice when you
walk through a room, how the energy shifts from one

(12:47):
room to another room, or into a store, or in
your car and out of your car, and just you know,
be paying attention to all these sensations because they all
show up when you're doing your session.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
We still have a handful of those initial remote viewers
who work with the government years ago, and I think
that's pretty fantastic, don't you.

Speaker 3 (13:13):
Yeah, they're you know, they're still working and doing and
and training you know, the next level of people. And
we are doing a lot working with a lot of
scientists and experimentation and seeing like other ways that we
can adapt remote viewing to. So, like I said before,

(13:37):
so it's not just working with you know, espionage or
the military, but personal growth and any kind of questions
that we want to figure out or find out or
you know, kind of gaining wealth too, and medical we
can also do medical feeling.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
What would you say is the true benefit of remote viewing.

Speaker 3 (14:07):
I think the benefit is having you know, like that's it.
I'm trying to think how to say it, like having
more dimension to what we perceive in the world. I
think understanding really what the truth is is what remote

(14:30):
viewing is. It's teaching us that we're more than just
this physical body here. You know, we can do more things,
and a lot of people are doing them every single day.
They're just not paying attention.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
You know.

Speaker 3 (14:45):
I can ask like one hundred people and they're, oh,
I'm not psychic, No, I'm not intuitive at all. But
then I'll ask them, oh, well, when was the last
time you had a gut feeling where at the last
minute you decided some thing like really quick. And that's it.
That's what we're talking. You're using that and it's like,

(15:07):
you know, kind of strengthening that muscle that we don't
really use, you know, like the Native Americans would you know,
they just go outside or they were outside, but go
outside and smell that the rain is coming. And now
we just look at a weather app so you know,

(15:27):
it's just like trusting yourself and your intuition. I think
that is really important.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
We're talking with Michelle Freed about remote viewing, will take
calls with her next hour here on Coast to Coast.
Of all the sessions that you've had training with, what
one thing just surprised you or shocked you the most?

Speaker 3 (15:48):
Michelle, I think that it works and the realization that
you have to experience it to understand it. I can
sit and tell you about all these amazing sessions that
people do, but I really think that people have to

(16:11):
do it in order to understand it fully.

Speaker 2 (16:15):
And I have always been told that the secret of
remote viewing is not to overthink things. Would you agree
with that?

Speaker 3 (16:23):
I would totally agree with that, because that's, you know,
that is the left brain trying to find patterns and
make sense out of everything. So I think a lot
of us use this example. We say like, oh, I'm
perceiving something red shiny and round. Our left brain's going

(16:45):
to go like a computer, and it's going to what's
red shiny and round? Oh, an apple? But what if
the red shiny and round is a truck or a
vehicle that is near a missing person? And then you
missed that by describing a fruit basket or something. So
it's basically you know, being able to adapt.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
That is remote viewing adaptable primarily for the past, the present, or.

Speaker 3 (17:17):
The future, all the above.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
And what's the what's the benefit of touching those three regions.

Speaker 3 (17:26):
Well, the past is if you're curious about uh, you know, uh,
like we do cold cases all the time. So I
think we were working on a project, the gen Benet case,
and we're working with people that do statement and like

(17:46):
a police department, they do statement analysis, they do uh
kind of n LP studying. And then we had eight
remote viewers work on it. So we're still compiling all
the inform so it's not a done thing, but it's
really you know, if you want to know like who
shot Kennedy or you know, things that happened in the past,

(18:09):
you would get some really profound information in some of
these sessions that and they can also help. I had
a professor call me that he was studying antiquities and
he was with a big team and they were at
an impasse with what they believed happened. And so I

(18:31):
did a session and it totally put them on a
whole different course to look in a different direction of
what where they were and so, and then they found
more more information going down the other direction. So the
past works like that. The present, I mean the present
what I don't even know. Like the present is like

(18:55):
if you are looking for a missing person and you
want to know their current location, like when you're doing
your session, you want to know their current condition or
their current location. And then the future is kind of
cool because you can look at the stock market, you
can you know, play with sporting events. It's super Bowl,

(19:17):
the Olympics are coming. I'm in fact, this Saturday. I'm
teaching that method and putting together teams in January just
for fun and so that people can you know, kind
of bet on the Olympics and the super Bowl and
all that stuff.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at
one am Eastern, and go to Coast to coastam dot
com for more

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