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Spiritual influencer Gia Prism sparks psychic movement as 4am Club claims Kamala Harris won the 2024 election in a parallel universe from Utah

Gia Prism
Gia Prism

Not everyone woke up on November 6, 2024, thinking it would be a regular Election Day.

For a growing group of online psychics, spiritual mediums, and dream interpreters, that early morning became the moment they believed the universe split in two.

They call themselves the “4am Club,” and their claims are as wild as they are compelling: in an alternate timeline, Kamala Harris won the 2024 U.S. election.

It might sound like the start of a dystopian sci-fi plot, but this movement has racked up hundreds of thousands of followers online.

And for many of its most devoted members, it’s not fiction—it’s a spiritual truth.


Who Are the 4am Clubbers?

The 4am Club isn’t your typical conspiracy group.

There’s no political manifesto or official membership card.

Instead, it’s a loosely connected community of spiritual influencers, psychics, and self-described “energy workers” who share visions, predictions, and mystical experiences through TikTok and other platforms.

At the center of it all is Gia Prism, a 43-year-old mom from Utah who describes herself as a healer, trans-channel, and psychic medium.

Though she insists she doesn’t believe all the claims made by fellow “clubbers,” she acknowledges that something deeply strange happened to her that November morning.

“I was woken up at 4am with this overwhelming feeling that something had gone wrong,” Gia shared in a viral TikTok.

“It felt like I was being called to anchor in a new timeline.”


A Vision of Kamala Harris as President

Gia says she experienced a vivid spiritual download: in it, Kamala Harris was being sworn in as president, and the mantra “Kamala has won” looped in her mind over and over.

As she described it, “streams of energy” coursed through her body, lighting her up “from head to toe.”

Since then, her TikTok following has exploded—from just 7,000 before the election to over 120,000 followers today.

Her videos, often blending spiritual guidance with political predictions, now regularly pull in tens of thousands of views.

And she’s not alone. Another prominent 4am Club figure, known on TikTok as Spirituality with Sam, has over 240,000 followers and shares similarly intense visions.

Sam declined to speak with the Daily Mail, but her influence in the movement is undeniable.


Disturbing Predictions and a Darker Tone

While the 4am Club started with dreamy spiritual visions and messages of hope, some of their content has taken a more unsettling turn.

Both Gia and Sam have shared graphic visions involving Donald Trump, including strokes and death imagery.

In one of Sam’s videos viewed nearly 174,000 times, she described Trump wandering a long hallway looking ghostly and frail before collapsing from a brain bleed.

Gia, too, has echoed this vision. “I’ve been shown him dying with blood on the brain,” she claimed.

Their followers see these visions as signs of political change—but experts are starting to worry.


Experts Are Watching Closely for Cult-Like Behavior

Rick Alan Ross, a cult expert who testified in the NXIVM sex-trafficking case, says social media has become a breeding ground for cult-like behavior.

Though he doesn’t believe the 4am Club has crossed into “cult” territory yet, he warns that it’s moving close to the line.

“What we’re seeing is a group that’s creating a comforting narrative for people who can’t accept Trump’s win,” Ross told Daily Mail.

He explained that cults typically form around three things: a totalitarian leader, isolation from outside influence, and a willingness to do harm.

The 4am Club doesn’t meet those criteria—yet.

But the club does share similarities with movements like QAnon on the right, or “BlueAnon” on the left—digital communities offering alternative realities to those disillusioned by mainstream politics.


Conspiracies or Comfort?

Critics like Kaivan Shroff, a digital strategist who worked on Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, say the rise of movements like the 4am Club reflects a dangerous trend.

“There are so many influencers you’ve never heard of with massive audiences who are shaping belief systems,” he said.

According to Shroff, these influencers play into what followers already want to believe.

“If someone hates Trump and sees a video predicting his downfall, they’re likely to share it without checking if it’s even true.”


Gia Prism Isn’t Backing Down

Gia Prism, for her part, brushes off the criticism. “If people don’t believe me, that’s fine.

I never asked them to,” she told the Daily Mail. “There are millions of psychics online. This isn’t new.”

She also insists the movement didn’t start from politics or any organized conspiracy—it was born from a shared, deeply personal experience that struck thousands of people all at once.

Her message is simple: “We’re not like QAnon. We’re not a cult.

We’re just people trying to make sense of something that changed us.”


So What Did They Actually Get Right?

Gia claims she has a 95% accuracy rate with her predictions, though there’s no clear list of what those accurate calls are.

Skeptics point out that vague visions, spiritual metaphors, and broad emotional readings are difficult to fact-check.

Still, the reach of the 4am Club shows no signs of slowing.

Millions are watching, liking, sharing—and believing.

Whether it’s a true spiritual awakening or just the digital age’s latest form of collective delusion remains to be seen.


Final Thought: A Movement, a Moment, or a Mirage?

Whether you see the 4am Club as a group of intuitive mystics or a gathering of disillusioned dreamers, one thing is clear—it speaks to something real.

Disbelief. Disconnection. The search for meaning in uncertain times.

In a world where facts, timelines, and even reality itself feel up for grabs, some people have turned to visions, energy, and alternate dimensions to cope.

And they’re finding their tribe—one 4am wake-up call at a time.