Van Praagh began his early career by giving private readings for clients by allegedly communicating with the spirits of their deceased friends and relatives, and quickly graduated to wider audiences through the sale and distribution of a series of audiotapes and books. In the early 1990s he began appearing on the
NBC paranormal talk show
The Other Side (broadcast 1994–1995), where he became a resident expert. He worked with a non-profit called
The Compassionate Friends, an organization for people who lost children or siblings. Van Praagh's work centers on his belief that there is no death, and that people who have died still exist, only in a different form. Van Praagh claims these spirits help guide him, and that they have told him there are "many levels of Heaven and we get to that level we have created by our thoughts, words and deeds while on earth." Danson received praise from outlets like the
Chicago Tribune and
People for his portrayal of Van Praagh as a man anguished by his lifelong visions of the dead, including his mother.
Beyond with James Van Praagh (2002) During the success of the paranormal television show
Crossing Over with John Edward in the early 2000s, Van Praagh and
Tribune Entertainment launched
Beyond with James Van Praagh, a paranormal talk show that distributed in
broadcast syndication, though it was unsuccessful, only running a half-season in the fall of 2002.
Beyond followed a similar format as
Crossing Over, with Van Praagh giving audience members and celebrities readings, as well as field investigations into crimes and missing persons.
Talking with the Dead (2004) CBS aired
Talking with the Dead (also known by the alternative title,
The Dead Will Tell), a thriller based on Van Praagh's experiences and directed by
Stephen Kay, on October 24, 2004.
Anne Heche produced and starred in the film as Emily Parkes, a woman who receives an antique engagement ring from her fiancé and begins to have visions of its murdered previous owner. The
made-for-TV movie also starred
Eva Longoria,
Christopher Guest and
Chris Sarandon.
Ghost Whisperer (2005-2010) Van Praagh served as co-executive producer on the CBS show
Ghost Whisperer, which starred
Jennifer Love Hewitt. Though the work and experiences of Van Praagh may have influenced the teleplay,
Ghost Whisperer was actually inspired by psychic Mary Ann Wynchowski, a woman whom Van Praagh met while filming
Beyond with James Van Praagh in 2002. Ghost Whisperer ran for five seasons from September 23, 2005, to May 21, 2010, on
CBS.
Lawsuit On January 22, 2013, James Van Praagh filed a lawsuit in federal district court in New York against his sister Lynn Gratton, who also claims to be a psychic. James Van Praagh has a trademark on his name and alleged that Lynn had infringed upon that trademark by starting to use her maiden name Van Praagh to financially benefit from his name even though Lynn took her (now deceased) husband's surname more than 50 years ago when she married him on August 28, 1970. ==Skepticism==