Is 'Apostle' Kathryn Krick Really Just a Failed Actress?
Krick moved to L.A. in 2013 to pursue acting. That didn't seem to go so well. Now she has a following of nearly two million people and travels the world "casting out demons" and "healing the sick."
I just posted the following video on my Instagram page of self-proclaimed “Apostle” Kathryn Krick “casting out spirits of witchcraft”:
I’ve posted about Kathryn Krick many times over the last few years. Here she is “casting out demons” from women in a Los Angeles park back in 2021. Here she is “breaking the demonic attachments” of occult and new age practices, voodoo dolls, Reiki, yoga, necromancy, witchcraft, egg cleanses, and so much more from another woman. And here she is “casting out a demon of autism,” which comedian Bobby Lee shared on his TigerBelly podcast and laughed about with guests Adam Devine, Blake Anderson, and Anders Holm.
Anyone with an ounce of common sense who watches these videos might think to themself that Krick is running a scam and that the people she is “healing” are faking their “deliverances.” But she now has nearly two million followers on social media and her audience is steadily growing.
Why do I care? Because she’s now traveling around the world and claiming to heal people from serious conditions like cancer, HIV, depression, and suicidal ideation. So, I decided to dig a little deeper and here’s what I found.
Kathryn Krick grew up in a small upstate New York town and after graduating from Ithaca college in 2013, she drove to Los Angeles with dreams of becoming an actor. But that didn’t seem to go so well. In the following video clips, she can be seen portraying characters ranging from a porn star to a Bay Watch-esque beauty.
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