August 7
The Amazing James Randi
On this date in 1928, Randall James Hamilton Zwinge, known as the Amazing James Randi, was born in Toronto, Canada. Randi used his international reputation as a magician and escape artist to investigate and expose claims of the paranormal. He exposed both psychic “spoonbender” Uri Geller and “faith-healer” Peter Popoff on “The Tonight Show” hosted by Johnny Carson. His numerous awards and recognitions include a “Genius” Fellowship from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation in 1986. In 1993, PBS-TV’s “NOVA” dedicated a one-hour special to coverage of Randi’s work, particularly his investigations of Geller and various occult and healing claims being made by scientists in Russia.
His books included: The Truth About Uri Geller, The Faith Healers, Flim-Flam! and An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural. Randi was a founding fellow of CSICOP, the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal. He established the James Randi Educational Foundation in 1996. The foundation offered a $1 million standing prize to any eligible applicant who could demonstrate evidence of any paranormal, supernatural or occult power or event under test conditions agreed to by both parties. A version of the challenge, similar to one that freethinker Harry Houdini was part of in the early 20th century, was first issued in 1964. More than a thousand persons took up the challenge and all failed. The foundation ended the challenge in 2015.
Randi retired at age 87. He had come out as gay at age 81 in 2010, announcing: “This declaration of mine was prompted just last week by seeing an excellent film ā starring Sean Penn ā that told the story of politician Harvey Milk. … Iām in excellent company: Barney Frank, Oscar Wilde, Stephen Fry, Ellen DeGeneres, Rachel Maddow, are just a few of those who were in my thoughts as I pressed the key that placed this on Swift and before the whole world.” He died at age 92. (D. 2020)
PHOTO: James Randi Educational Foundation under CC 2.0.
“[T]here are two sorts of atheists. One sort claims that there is no deity; the other claims that there is no evidence that proves the existence of a deity. I belong to the latter group, because if I were to claim that no god exists, I would have to produce evidence to establish that claim, and I cannot.”
— James Randi, newsletter at randi.org (Aug. 5, 2005)
Charles Southwell
On this date in 1814, Charles Southwell was born in London. Southwell became an atheist as a teenager after reading Sermons by the Calvinist Timothy Dwight. After serving in the British Foreign Legion in Spain during the Carlist War, Southwell became a popular and prolific freethought lecturer in London. He opened a radical bookstore and helped found the atheist periodical The Oracle of Reason (1841-43), which often published fiercely anti-Christian material. It was among the first avowedly atheist publications in England. Southwell and several later editors were imprisoned for blasphemy.
āThe … BIBLE has been for ages the idol of all sorts of blockheads, the glory of knaves, and the disgust of wise men. It is a history of lust, sodomies, wholesale slaughtering, and horrible depravity; that the vilest parts of all other histories, collected in one monstrous book, could scarcely parallel,ā Southwell wrote in The Oracle of Reason. (Politics 1790-1900, Edward Royle, 1976) Southwell boldly asserted in 1842 that āThe world could not have been designed by one being, infinitely wise, infinitely good, and infinitely powerful.ā
Southwell lived in New Zealand from 1856 until his death in 1860, where he was influential to the freethought movement there. The New Zealand Association of Rationalists and Humanists named its Charles Southwell Award after him. Southwell wroteĀ An Apology for Atheism (1846), Superstition Unveiled (1854) and The Confessions of a Freethinker andĀ founded the newspapers The Investigator, The Lancashire Beacon and The Auckland Examiner. (D. 1860)
āSuperstition is the tyranny of tyrannies, and its priests the tyrants of tyrants.ā
— Southwell, "The Oracle of Reason" (1842)
Charlize Theron
On this date in 1975, actress Charlize Theron was born in Benoni in the Transvaal region of South Africa, the only child of Gerda (Maritz) and Charles Theron, who operated the nation’s third-largest road construction business and owned a large farm. Her native tongue was Afrikaans but she also became fluent in English. Her childhood goal was to become a ballet dancer.
When Theron was 15, her alcoholic father came home drunk and started shooting at her and her mother, and her mother shot him to death. It was ruled self-defense. The next year she won a contest for a one-year contract to model in Europe and lived with her mother in Italy before moving to the U.S. Giving up her professional ballet aspirations, due partially to knee problems, she moved to Los Angeles and lived paycheck to paycheck while studying acting.
Her first speaking film role was in “2 Days in the Valley” (1996) and larger roles soon followed, including in “The Devil’s Advocate” (1997), “Mighty Joe Young” (1998) and “The Cider House Rules” (1999). Her portrayal in “Monster” (2003) of serial killer Aileen Wuornos, executed in Florida for killing six men, was “one of the greatest performances in the history of the cinema,” critic Roger Ebert wrote. It won her the Best Actress Oscar, the first ever for a South African.
In “North Country” (2005), based on Lois Jenson’s true story, Theron played the Minnesota iron mine worker subjected to years of workplace sexual harassment. Amber Heard portrayed the character, raped as a teen by her high school teacher, in flashbacks. Theron again received Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations for Best Actress and appeared on the cover of Ms. Magazine under the headline “Charlize Theron & Niki Caro Fight for Working Women.”
Since then, as of this writing in 2021, she has had roles in 29 films and has received numerous acting accolades, including a Best Actress nomination for “Bombshell” (2019), in which she plays former Fox News host Megyn Kelly. It’s based on accusations by Fox employees who alleged CEO Roger Ailes was a serial sexual harasser.
The 5-foot, 10-inch actress is known for working hard to get “in character.” She gained 50 pounds to play a pregnant suburban mother in 2018’s “Tully.” It took her 18 months to lose the weight. Answering Vanity Fair’s “Proust Questionnaire” in 2021 about what she most dislikes about her appearance, she said “big shoulders.” The living person she most admires? Her mother. The greatest love of her life? “My kids.”
Theron has never married (“not my thing,” she once told an interviewer) but has had long-term relationships with actor Craig Bierko, singer Stephan Jenkins (Third Eye Blind) and actors Stuart Townsend and Sean Penn. In 2020 she told an interviewer that she hasn’t dated seriously in five years and that she’s fulfilled by being a mom to her adopted Black daughters Jackson, then 8, and August, 5. Jackson is transgender.
Asked in a 2008 interview if she believed in God (see quote below), Theron called herself “pagan at heart.” When it became known two years later that she was attending Kabbalah classes and was seen wearing the red bracelet of the celebrity “religion du jour,” insiders said she had turned to Kabbalah to deal with her recent split from Townsend and “as a means to more of a social life and mixing with the Hollywood elite.” (The Daily Mail, Feb. 20, 2010)
She became a dual citizen of South Africa and the U.S. in 2007. She created the Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project that same year, and in 2008 she was named a United Nations Messenger of Peace for her efforts to support African youth in the fight against HIV/AIDS.
PHOTO: Theron inĀ 2015 at the “Mad Max: Fury Road” premiere in Los Angeles; photo by Kathy Hutchins / Shutterstock.com
“I think I am pagan at heart. My Mum always told me, even as a kid, to come to my own conclusion. So I started going to church, but then stopped. Someone from the church came to see my mother and said, ‘We need to talk about Charlizeās non-attendance.’ I remember my mother pointing at me and saying, ‘You can talk to her yourself ā sheās here.’ ā
— Interview, The Daily Mail (June 15, 2008)
Jennifer Welch
On this date in 1973, Jennifer Welch was born in Dallas, Texas, where she lived until moving with her family at age 7 to Oklahoma. Once described as “the liberal’s answer to Joe Rogan” for her podcasts focusing on political and cultural issues, she also has her own interior design company.
Welch says she was raised by two atheists. “We never went to a church service unless it was a wedding or a funeral. I have had this experience of being raised in the so-religious suburbs of Oklahoma City. Like the people that you saw with their hands raised praising at the Charlie Kirk funeral, those are the people I went to high school with.” (Rolling Stone, Sept. 30, 2025)
She ran the snow cone machine and retrieved golf balls from the driving range at her family’s “funplex” entertainment center. Her dad also trained racing pigeons. She competed in Lincoln-Douglas debate in high school and “honed her argumentative skill on the pom squad, where she coordinated routines with cheerleaders who believed Ms. Welch, an atheist, was doomed to spend an eternity in hell.” (New York Times, Dec. 7, 2025)
In college, Welch found “comfort and companionship with gay men, because they had had to fight the same system that I had to fight, and they just had more grit. They had been persecuted by the same people that told me and my mother and my father and my siblings that we were all going to burn in hell. Having never been indoctrinated, and then living around a bunch of people that have been indoctrinated was a very weird upbringing, and it drove me into [being] a very left, very grounded, very fact-based person.” (Ibid.)
She launched Jennifer Welch Designs in the early 2000s, offering full-service residential and commercial design that gained recognition for stylish, comfortable interiors and celebrity clientele. Welch’s son Dylan was born in 2002, after which she married his father, a criminal defense attorney, in 2005. Their second son, Roman, was born in 2006. They divorced in 2013 and reconciled for a time in 2015. “Happily divorced” is how Welch later described it.
Her professional relationship on Bravo TV’s reality show “Sweet Home Oklahoma” with Angie Sullivan stemmed from their sons’ friendship. Sullivan, four years older than Welch, evolved on the show from conservative Republican to shedding her religious beliefs. The last straw, Sullivan later said, was the Supreme Courtās Dobbs decision that overturned abortion rights nationwide, making her āso fucking mad at white women.ā
The show aired for two seasons, ending in 2019. They reunited professionally in 2022 with a podcast titled “I’ve Had It” that covered a wide range of topics, some lighthearted, some not. One eponymous recurring segment features discussion of whether they’d āhad itā or not with something, such as people taking too long to pull out of a parking spot when someone was waiting to pull in.
The fierce politics didn’t vanish. When Erika Kirk, widow of murdered right-wing religious activist Charlie Kirk, commented at a DealBook summit in New York City that “What I donāt want to have happen is young women in the city look to the government as a solution to put off having a family or a marriage because youāre relying on the government to support you.”
Welch responded:Ā “You are an opportunistic grifter who weaponizes your gender to demean women, and you are a walking, talking, breathing example as to why nobody, number one, wants to be a Christian, and, number two, wants to be a female hypocrite such as yourself. … Your deceased husband was an unrepentant racist and a homophobe, and women are a lot more empathetic than you are, Erika.” (Yahoo! News, Dec. 9, 2025)
“I’ve Had It” is updated twice a week and its shorter counterpart “IHIP News” twice a day as of this writing in 2025, the year they published their memoir “Life Is a Lazy Susan of Sh*t Sandwiches.” They have several million followers, including 1.3 million on YouTube and nearly 1 million on Instagram.
The switch from reality TV to podcasting attracted a surprising audience to āIāve Had Itā ā young, queer people. Welch and Sullivan had assumed their audience would primarily be middle-aged white women but analytics showed the majority to be LGBTQ+ community members.
āFor us, a lot of these issues are not political, they’re moral,ā Welch says. āIt’s a moral issue for us to support marginalized people and lift them up, especially as mothers. I just think it’s really inhumane to judge people based on their sexual orientation and gender identity.ā (The Oklahoman, Aug. 4, 2023)
āIāve always been stuck here, and Iāve always felt like an outsider. Iāve always been harassed and ridiculed for my belief system, and itās going to be nice to be around people where itās not a big deal that Iām an atheist.ā
— Welch, about moving from Oklahoma to New York City in 2025