In the January issue of Boca magazine, we convened three South Florida psychics—Erin Lee, Halley Elise and Kat Divine—to train their third eyes on 2026. They returned with so many insights into the year ahead that we couldn’t fit them all in our print edition. In this Web Extra, the ladies offer their observations on subjects ranging from entertainment and AI to climate, economics and medicine.
Erin Lee: In entertainment, I saw that there’s a change to the way we take in movies, like when you go to the theater, I see it as like a bundled package where you can do a double feature, kind of like how things were in the golden age of movies, back in the early days.
I saw a historical landmark in South Florida that there would be some kind of battle with how the property is being used. In Palm Beach County, it would be something that was a house but turned into a restaurant with a gift shop, like kind of a mixed-use place, ultimately preserved and protected.
Halley Elise: I am getting more concrete information about alternative life, different than what we know here. And as a direct result of that, I feel as if there is going to be technology that is developed that is even more profound than what we’ve seen in the last, we’ll say, 50 to 75 years. Because if we backtrack prior to that time, our technology advances were very slow. I do believe that, yes, we have some amazing people working within the public spectrum as well as the government that have, at times, merged together to create better technology. But I believe there is more to be released than is already available, but it’s only being used at the highest levels.
For AI overall, what seems to be coming up for me for 2026 is, yes, it’s very helpful as it is, but there’s going to be more of a push for people to interact with it on a day-in and day-out basis. So for instance, your refrigerator may have more AI capacity than it does now, and there are some systems now that connect to a small degree, but it’s definitely going to expand in ‘26.
As to weather patterns, I’m getting a massive storm—much more severe than anybody anticipates. So for instance, they might be thinking, Oh, it’s like a three, and it ends up being a five, or they think it’s a five, but it’s actually larger than that. It’s a bit scary, because I don’t feel like people are going to take it as seriously as they should, and I feel there’s going to be a lot of recovery afterwards.
In the U.S., the government gets a little more involved with the housing market than one would think. So, for instance, they might come in and offer, let’s say, several houses in a row, because they’re coming in and putting in a road, because they need that road for some sort of governmental complex that they’re doing. I feel like there’s going to be a lot of dancing, if you will, from thing to thing within the government, where they are opening up new, I’ll call it facilities, locations, annexes, that are a little bit surprising.
Specifically, I feel there are a multitude of changes within the government structure and how it affects the general public. So it’s not about generals and who’s being fired or hired. It’s more about what is being created as a result of the government putting a hand in where previously they did not.
You’ll have moments where the stock market’s crashing, and then a week later it’s back. I’m not getting that we have a major crash that lasts for an extended period. During the midterms, it feels like something’s going to be wonky with the stock market and with gasoline, but I don’t feel like it stays. I feel like it regulates itself in a short period of time.
Kat Divine: [I see] a train strike. … So something with a train, and I also see … a train accident happening that is pretty significant.
Here’s another one, which we’ve heard years ago, but the phones get disconnected, and there’s illegal directives with that.
Medical industries are fighting to compete with prescription drugs. So they’re going to continue to fight and push more of that, knowing that it’s not good for us in certain ways, but they’re going to be fighting to really push, as on television ads and everything else. I have a connection with it with AI—that they’re going to use AI to make sure that that gets pushed out to more people to consume.
This Web Extra is from the January 2026 issue of Boca magazine. For more like this, click here to subscribe to the magazine.






