The Oxygen Network, which was ironically co-founded by Oprah, is now running a True Crime show that just featured James Ray's killing of the three people in the fake sweat.
This would have never happened when Oprah still had a controlling share of the network, but Oxygen has been sold, so this featured clips of James Ray on Oprah, with Oprah, and mentioned multiple times how people trusted James Ray with their lives and finances largely because he had been endorsed by people like Oprah and Larry King.
Former followers stressed that James Ray used his lies about selling Indigenous Wisdom to rope them in. They gave him money because they wanted the benefits of Native teachings, fast and easy, for money, from a white man, rather than having to actually respect and trust Native people. Obviously, they didn't admit the latter part of this, but several were very clear about the fact that Ray's lies about having the Native Secrets were why they trusted this con man and subjected themselves to his deadly torture.
While no Natives were interviewed, the lead investigator stressed that they investigated Ray, and Ray's backround and training. They quickly discovered what we all know: James Arthur Ray had no training or qualifications to lead any Native American or Hawaiian ceremonies whatsoever. He is a complete fraud, con man and cult leader who killed people out of his own greed and negligence.
While phrasing was not consistent, it was repeated that this was not a real, or Native, or traditional, ceremony, and that Ray was not only totally unqualified and untrained, but that he was inventing harmful things and, as we know, completely ignoring people's cries and symptoms of severe distress. Family members of the victims are interviewed along with former followers.
As James Ray keeps trying to re-launch his appalling, self-help, newage grift, I think this new True Crime special is a good addition to the coverage out there.
The Show is on the Oxygen Network and is called "Deadly Cults". The James Arthur Ray episode, S2 E1, aired on Sunday under the title, "Spiritual Warriors", with the description: "After three obedient followers die during an intense sweat lodge ceremony put on by a prominent self-help guru, police must determine if their deaths were accidental, or did the guru push the participants too far."