Tyler henry is he gay
If you’ve ever cried during a medium’s reading, you’re not alone. And if you’ve ever cried during a courthouse wedding upload, well—same hat, different tears.
Celebrity clairvoyant and former Kardashian spiritual consultant (yes, thats a job) Tyler Henry just announced that he’s officially off the market, having married longtime partner Clint Godwin in what can only be described as a gay millennial’s dream ceremony: low-key, high-love, and very Beverly Hills.
RELATED: Tyler Henry’s Supernatural Abilities are Gay
With a single understated Instagram photo and the caption, “Today, we are married! Life with you is an endless sleepover with my best friend and life’s just getting started,” Tyler delivered the soft-launch of a lifetime. And yes, in case you were wondering, the sleepover line made half the internet dissolve into a mist of feelings and glitter.
For anyone who’s followed Tyler’s journey—from emotional readings with Ricki Lake and Chrishell Stause to having the Kardashians on speed dial—it’s touching (and a minuscule poetic) that his most meaningfu
TV star Tyler Henry opens up about coming out as gay and 'Hollywood Medium'
By the looks of it, Tyler Henry should be on Cloud Nine — literally and figuratively. He is easy on the eyes — tall, young, handsome, a head full of thick blond hair — a bestselling author (“Between Two Worlds”) and the star of a hit TV verb on E! (“Hollywood Medium with Tyler Henry”), a network notorious for spotlighting the fierce and the fabulous.
Henry is also a self-described evidential-based medium, which, depending on how you do the cosmic math, foretells a life filled with interpreting messages from the invisible realm and “the other side,” adding those elements up, drawing a line under them, and offering the sum of all spiritual parts to the likes of Hollywood head-turners such as Margaret Cho, Khloe Kardashian, Eva Longoria, Ryan Lochte, Chad Michael Murray (yet another amazing hairline!), and countless others.
Ironically, considering what he does for a living, Henry never saw any of his current fame coming. The out, self-described loner whose childhood premonitions about death and “the o
Grief vampire Tyler Henry is back at it again; Live From the Other Side aired in Fall Netflix has obviously learned that cash is to be made by enabling this so-called psychic medium. A couch for five people, a couple of chairs for Henry and moderator Amanda Kloots, a coffee table, a few fake plants, and that’s pretty much it. Cameras of course, including one directly over Henry’s head so the audience can watch him scribble in his notebook, as if that has any meaning whatsoever.
This time Netflix is letting Henry go in cold. Who he reads is a mystery to him until he walks on stage, lights go up, and after hugs and introductions, the scribbling begins.
I’ve watched the first four episodes in full, recorded my observations of what is going on, and now reporting back to you, dear reader. It is unusual for Henry to be put in this position; he isn’t as practiced as his normal Hollywood Medium show where he clearly knows who he is going to read before the reading. These people are sprung on him, and it shows.
Let me just say, I’ve been following and writing about Tyler Henry since
Netflix’s Life After Death and Life From the Other Sidehost Tyler Henry says having supernatural abilities is akin to being gay.
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RELATED: Out Clairvoyant Tyler Henry Debuts New Netflix Series
In an exclusive interview with them magazine, Tyler spoke about the parallels of being a clairvoyant to being a member of the LGBTQ+ community. He spoke about simultaneously figuring out his sexuality and gender identity and figuring out how to use his abilities as a 10 to year-old, at the time, expressing:
“My sexuality, my sense of self, my gender identity, of course, was all being put into perspective.”
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It’s safe to say that many of us are privy to the feeling of being distinct, for whatever reason that may be. This so-called ‘difference’ in society is not lost on Henry, sharing that being a ‘medium’ was actually less familiar than being gay to those around him.
“I found that, if anything, it [being a clairvoyant] helped [me] in that I was able to hold more courage in being adj to who I was on some level.”
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