Speaker
Lee Harris
Appearances over time
1 episodes
Episodes
1Podcasts
Quotes & moments
Lee Harris's content reaches approximately 2 million people per month across all platforms, according to his own social media team.
Lee Harris's monthly energy update videos receive between 350,000 and 500,000 views per month on YouTube alone.
After a yoga teacher shared Lee Harris's channeling offer to her 300-person newsletter, he completed 60 readings in 60 days and the work kept growing.
Lee Harris has been publicly doing channeling and intuitive work for 22 years, starting with paper leaflets in 2004.
The Z's, according to Lee Harris, are a council of 88 beings — some formerly incarnate on Earth, some galactically oriented — who act as a consciousness library bridging Earth and galactic knowledge.
Lee Harris, who began secretly binge-eating sugar as a child and was taken to Weight Watchers at 10, began losing 60 pounds at age 16, a process that took two years.
Lee Harris first heard the voice of his guides — which he came to call the Z's — at age 23 while on the Northern Line of the London Underground commuting to his fundraising job.
Lee Harris supports a team of almost 20 people through his spiritual media operation.
Lee Harris stopped doing individual private readings in 2019 after 15 years in order to focus on broader online work and workshops.
The Z's originally spoke through three named personas — Zachary, Ziodora, and Zephariah — before consolidating into a single voice in 2013, citing the need for integration over separation.
When Lee Harris launched his monthly energy updates in 2012, his first video received 14,000 views, which he considered a significant number at the time.
Lee Harris did private one-on-one readings and channeling sessions for 15 years before stopping in 2019 to focus on broader online outreach.
Mariana van Zeller asks Lee Harris directly whether he's just making good money through an elaborate con. Harris acknowledges the criticism, earns a good living, and then turns the argument: if money had been his goal, he could have achieved it far more easily and far earlier. He points out that criticizing channelers for profiting while ignoring the value audiences receive is also a way of dismissing those audiences.
Mariana van Zeller notes the US government has logged over 1,600 UAP reports but officially explained only 21. Harris says he's been skeptical of government UFO programs for decades — not because the phenomena aren't real, but because he believes there has been conscious collaboration with non-human intelligence all along, not mere investigation. He questions why disclosures are happening now and what they're designed to distract from.
The Z's are not a single entity but a council of 88 beings — some with past human incarnations, some galactically oriented toward Andromeda and Sirius. They describe themselves as a consciousness library bridging Earth and galactic knowledge, and they told Harris almost 30 years ago that humans are hybrid beings far more connected to the galaxy than they've been told. Recent UAP disclosures, Harris says, are making that claim feel less far-fetched.
Lee Harris was commuting to his fundraising job on London's Northern Line, mentally blaming his partner for a relationship problem, when an unmistakable voice above his head said: 'That's an interesting theory, but you are wrong.' He felt his entire energy field shift from closed to open in an instant. It wasn't just the information — it was the undeniable physical change in his body that convinced him something real had happened.
At age 10, Lee Harris was eating five Snickers bars in secret before sitting down to a full dinner to avoid his mother knowing. He was taken to Weight Watchers at 10 and cycled through diet clinics as a teen — all while knowing he was gay and unable to tell anyone. He started losing 60 pounds at 16, the same moment he came out and began discovering spirituality.
When Lee Harris came out to his mother at 16, she asked him not to tell his father for at least two years, unsure he knew his own mind. They went from being intensely close to complete silence inside the house — yet no one at family dinners would have noticed anything was wrong. He describes it as one of the most traumatic periods of his life.
Lee Harris says he has never been fixated on proving the Z's are external beings or determining their origin. His evidence has always been pragmatic: personal predictions that played out, strangers who received readings and wept with recognition, and a consistent high hit-rate on messages he wrote down and checked weeks later. If he died and found out it was just his higher self all along, he says he genuinely wouldn't care.
Channeling, as Harris practices it, requires a near-meditative neutrality: allowing the information to stream without letting your emotional reaction interrupt it. He describes the process as taking dictation — you must keep writing or typing until the message is complete, only reading it back as a human being once the stream has stopped. The moment you let yourself react, you corrupt the transmission.
The Z's have long told Harris that as human consciousness rises, an opposing force — darker and more controlling — intensifies to counteract it. He describes a coming reckoning in global leadership: multiple groups vying for control, some of which will cancel each other out. The question, he says, isn't whether a shift comes — it's how much damage humanity sustains before the rebuild.
Without prior preparation, Lee Harris performs a live reading on Mariana van Zeller, predicting that from 2027 her life and work will expand dramatically — more global, more justice-focused, more powerful. He tells her her mind is about to 'move down into her heart' and that a period of personal healing has already begun. Mariana confirms several of his observations are accurate, particularly about a major career transition underway.
Lee Harris considered abandoning public channeling on at least three separate occasions. The work that attracts the most attention — and the most criticism — is only one part of what he does; his facilitation and intuitive workshops are more dominant. He remains unsure he'll still be publicly channeling in five years. The driving force keeping him in it has never been fame or money — it's been the consistent response from people who say it helped.
Lee Harris deliberately avoided creating a congregation-style community — something he observed other channelers doing, including guides that told their followers what to do and instructed them to fund specific projects. He built a cancel-anytime membership model and has never told followers what to believe. The loneliness that drives people into exploitative spiritual groups is real, he says, and it's the same dynamic that fuels romance scams.
Lee Harris enters a channeling state mid-interview, and the Z's speak directly to Mariana — calling her a 'being of light,' explaining that war cycles are not created by ordinary people but fed to them by systemic forces, and urging humanity to reconnect with its heart. When Mariana asks how she can know the Z's are real, they respond: 'You do not — but how do you know you are real?' The question is unanswerable, and deliberately so.
Analysis
What they talk about
- Religion & Spirituality 46%
- Society & Culture 27%
- Education 9%
- Government 9%
- History 9%
Connections
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