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Home » The Art of Reading Minds: Oz Pearlman (Transcript)

The Art of Reading Minds: Oz Pearlman (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of mentalist Oz Pearlman’s talk titled “The Art of Reading Minds”, recorded at TED2025 on April 11, 2025.

OZ PEARLMAN: I am billed as the world’s greatest mind reader, but guess what? I can’t read minds. What I can do is read people. And people ask a question all the time, which is, were you born with this? And the answer is no.

Of course not. Absolutely not. I do not possess any supernatural powers. I am not a psychic. This is a learnable skill that I feel anyone could do, but I’ve applied for about roughly three decades at reverse engineering the human mind.

If I know how you think, I know what you think. And I want to ask each and every one of you in this room a question. But before we do, take a deep breath in. Take a deep breath in. Exhale out, and close your eyes.

Little Zen mode. Okay? I see the people with trust issues, eyes wide open, holding their wallets and phones. Fellow New Yorkers. Here is my question.

The Dinner Question

If you could have dinner, hypothetical, with someone famous. Right? Some of you have heard this question already. I didn’t invent it. I love asking people.

Someone famous, dead or alive, past or present, man, woman, whatever, I like to ask people, who would that person be for you? It’s fascinating. Everyone’s different. And if you’ve already done it, open your eyes. Some of you have done it.

Some of you are quick. I see nods. I see people that are decisive. If you haven’t, you always need a deadline for creativity. Three, two, one, crunch time.

Open your eyes. Everyone out there, give me a big clap over your head if you can see your person in your mind’s eye. Give me a big clap. One more big clap. Notice the technique.

Elbows locked on this man. Michael Phelps would have been jealous of that streamline. Stand up, please. Stand up, please. Introduce yourself.

“Sorry. I’m Ian.”

Ian, question for you. Before you walked in this room and sat down, did you have any idea who I was or what I was going to do?

“No, actually.”

Sorry. Okay. That’s cool. Nobody reads the agenda. Totally fine.

Totally fine. Give me another clap. Give me another clap. I like that. Right here, you not only clap, but through a little belly dance, I reward extra credit.

She’s hiding her name tag. She’s like, I’m giving the mentalist nothing. Tell us, what is your name?

“Oh, hi. I’m Najira.”

Najira? Right. Stand up, please. Did I say that correctly? Najira?

“Yeah.”

Wonderful. Wonderful. Give me another clap. Give me another clap.

One more clap. This man and I just locked eyes. When we made eye contact, he closed his eyes tightly as it’s activating a camouflage shield where if he doesn’t see me, would I still see him? I still see you, Jeff Johnson. Stand up, please.

Give all three helpers a round of applause. Notice the question and the way it was phrased. Dead or alive? Fifty fifty, like flipping a coin. All three of you, please, I don’t read minds.

Reading People, Not Minds

I’m telling you the truth. I read people. Try not to react. If the person you thought of is alive, then their heart is beating in their chest. The room is getting warm like the blood flowing through their veins.

They’re happy. They’re smiling, alive, warming up, warming up. Cold, you feel a shiver down your neck. Clear cut. Hundred percent.

Hundred percent. Jeff Johnson, your person is alive and well. Am I right?

“You’re right.”

The boisterous smile, the effervescence, hundred percent. Versus Ian, dead guy vibes written all over this guy. Is it a dead guy?

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“Yes.”

Classic Ian. Classic.

Ian, focus on this. Now also the lingering hands and pockets always indicator of another guy. Guy to guy interaction. Is it a guy?

“Yes.”

Of course, it is. If it’s a female, hands in front of the crotch. I don’t know why. A few of you are going to get home and you see your husband like this, and you’re like, who is he? Ian, think of his first name.

Think of his last name. First name, last name. Come back to me. The first name, try to count the letters. This doesn’t make sense.

Listen to me. This doesn’t make sense. He was confused when I asked about the last name. He tried to shield it, but I saw it. Why was he confused?

Then I asked the first name, count the letters. It was too long. Sit down if it’s Alexander the Great.

“What?”

You don’t have to hold the applause inside, Ted. You can let it out. Now you’ve seen a taste of what I do, and this is used primarily for the purpose of entertainment. But what I’d like to show you now is how you could apply the principles of my craft, which is known as mentalism, to your everyday lives, at home, at work, in your relationships. How would guessing a celebrity out of a stranger’s mind help you? Well, frankly, it really can’t.

The Name Memory Superpower

But I have a situation, a scenario where knowing someone’s name would be incredibly valuable. Let me paint a portrait. You’re at a party. You’re at a work event. You’ve walked up to somebody new.

You’ve looked them in the eye. You’ve shaken their hands. You’ve introduced yourselves to each other. And right at that moment, you realize that you have completely forgotten the person’s name who just told it to you one second ago. Raise your hand if you can share this experience.

You raised your hands to you, liar. She’s like, not me. Not me. I want to give you a superpower from this day forward where you will never ever forget the name of someone you just met, ever. And how am I going to do this?

Using, can you guess, shampoo. Didn’t see that one coming, did you? The back of every bottle of shampoo is a master class in brilliant marketing. Three words in the instructions, lather, rinse, repeat.