 Hi, it's Bridget. Welcome to Above Life channel. The purpose here is to inspire your spirit and to fill you up with hope. This video is part of a series of videos. I've done channeling Freddie Mercury in the afterlife. Now this video, I'm going to talk with Freddie about how he feels after the Oscars. Now I know you'll probably be like, what? If you're watching this video other than in February or March 2019, you might be like, why are you asking Freddie Mercury about the Oscars? How does he feel about that? Because Bohemian Rhapsody was nominated for Best Picture and Rami Malik, who played Freddie Mercury in that movie, won the Oscar for Best Actor. And so I thought it would be appropriate to connect with Freddie this morning, the morning after the Oscars and find out how the afterlife looks at this stuff. So let's have a chat with him. Again, this is part, this was originally part of the four videos, four days of channeling videos with Freddie Mercury in the afterlife, which you've already gotten five videos and now this will make it six. So I hope you enjoy the extra videos that I've shared with you. All right. And to find the additional videos, they are all on the Freddie Mercury playlist here at Above Life channel. Check out the playlists and you will find it. All right, so let's chat with Freddie, shall we? Okay. All right, so how are you feeling? How are you doing today? He's like he says, I'm always good. You know, I'm always good. It's kind of funny to ask a afterlife spirit that because they're not there. Of course, they're great because they're just spirit. They don't have to deal with the human stuff, right? But I want to talk to you about the human stuff, Freddie. We've got to talk about that. And to let you guys know too, I'm recording this video after I've already actually, I did an audio this morning with Freddie Mercury too. So we've already connected. So all right, so we already have the pleasantries done, right? Okay, so let's talk about the movie Bohemian Rhapsody. It was up for Best Picture. It did not win. But the band Queen, your band, opened up for them. So let's talk about that. Let's start with the opening. They opened up. They did. We will rock you and we are the champions. How do you feel about that? He says, he's like drinking tea, just so you guys know. And I actually made tea for myself too. So I have to have a little bit too. All right. So how do you feel about that? He says, well, quite as expected, as expected, you know, that the song choice was as expected, I was kind of hoping they would do something, you know, something live aid like, you know, with a bunch of, he says, well, they don't have time, dear. He's like, they don't have time. They don't have time. You're right. That's true. There's like a time restriction there. He says, it's not a rock concert. It's a performance. Okay. I kind of wanted the rock concert though. I'm sure a lot of people watching did too, but it kind of got us in the mood, you know, to have some fun, you know, and to be at the Oscars. And it was an exciting year this year in Hollywood. Do you have any kind of, okay, so you, as expected, the song choice, had you been the performer? Well, for one, would you have performed? If you were invited to perform, would you perform? He says, oh, I don't know. He says, I don't know. He says, I don't know. Okay, so why is that? Why is there a feeling of not uncertainty about that? Not sure if you would actually have performed or not. If you were still here with us in human form, and if Queen was invited to perform because there was this movie about, you know, the biopic about the band, would you have performed? He says, I don't know. It's the energy that's coming forward. And I feel like it's because so he's giving me information sensory. So I'm sensing and feeling the energy and then I'm sharing it with you. So I'm sensing energy is giving me energy information through energy through the Claricentian channel, the heart channel. And then I'm translating that into words for you guys just so you know, that's how this is working right now. All right. So what's the not uncertainty about? He says, I don't think it would have been that big of a deal. Quite honestly, had I still been around? I don't know that it would be something people would want. I suppose they would. But it would be different. You know, he said it would be different. At least for me, it would be different. Well, how so? And he's showing me age, like it wears on you over time. And the band is, you know, in their 60s and things. And I can't imagine. He says, no, it's not about that. It's not about the age. It's not about age and aging rocker. That's not what he said. He says, you know, that things change over time. The music changes. The performance has changed. He says, it wouldn't be the queen that everyone wanted that they saw in the in the movie. You know, the rockers, he says, the rockers. Well, they did a pretty dang good job. You know, your former bandmate's Roger and Brian did awesome. He says, yeah, he says, yeah. Well, he says, would I sing and perform if I was still alive? Yes. He says, yes, but it will be different. It will be different. It's a different way of, he said, it's a different state of reinventing yourself. It's different. You know, he says, you don't act like you did when you were young. He says, your body can't handle. He says, your body can't handle all that roughness. For one thing, he says, but the adrenaline, though, he says, the rush of the crowd just carries you through all that. He says, the stamina and things like in the performances, the rush of the crowd and that adrenaline energy just carries you right through all the performance. But he says, but that would be tiresome after a time. I would want to do other things, you know. I might sit at a piano, sit behind a piano and sing, you know, a ballad or something. He said something softer, maybe. But he says, I don't really think it would be as big of a deal, he says. Or I don't know that. Even if Queen was still here, or you were still here and part of Queen and Queen was still the band together and you were this lead singer. He says, it doesn't really feel like there's like an uncertainty about that. And I think it's probably because did you ever get the sense that you wouldn't have a full life? Like that you wouldn't grow old? He says, oh, that's rather morbid. He says, and he's smoking. He says, that's rather morbid. But I'm glad you ask, he says. But I'm glad you ask. He says, not really, not really. You don't really think of those things. I suppose when your friends and those around you are having families and going through those sorts of family experiences, you see time as something that's passing. But you don't really realize it until it affects you and you get tired. And you don't really want to go out and be wild and explore and have new crazy experiences and stuff. I don't know the right words you guys to say, but it's like he's talking about like, wild is the best way to describe it. Like not needing to have this constant, chaotic energy. And he says, I just, I didn't have that anymore. It was about, he said, it was a good eight or 10 years, eight years. He said, right about 10 years before his death, he shows me that he started to realize that things needed to change and that he maybe could think about he started noticing he was different. And so is that due to age? Because you were 45 when you died, so I'm in 35. That's still really, that's still pretty darn young and happening for even for a rock star. I mean, if you look at the types like, you know, Elton John, who I know you were friends with, and who else, Beatles, Paul McCartney, I mean, they're, you know, out rocking it and stuff. He says, yeah, but he says, you know, he says, different things, I would definitely do different things. But then he shows me like eight years before his death, about then that's when he really, he says, I really knew things were changing, things would be different for me. I didn't, I couldn't quite understand or put my finger on it, or maybe I didn't want to think about it. But I thought about, you know, like aging, growing old, kind of a thing. What would I do when I couldn't do music anymore? Or what if, he says, what if like his biggest fear, you guys, feels like losing his voice. They refer to that in the movie, but that it was a concern of his, was his voice. Like that was the, his reason for living is his voice. He's very connected to it. So there wasn't so much a fear of dying as there was a fear of not being able to sing. So that was, that's accurate. He says, yeah, oh yes, oh yes, he says, oh yes. You know, I can still write songs and play music, but it's not the same as performing. Yeah, would you write songs for others? He said, I did. I did. What do you mean by that? He wrote, it looks like he wrote pieces of songs to leave behind or pieces of like words that he left behind that could have been made into music for other people. So whether that be, you know, Brian or Roger or whoever, it feels like there was some of that. I can't quite see you writing songs for other people necessarily, but unless you did, I don't know what he did. I'm kind of confused by that. He may have been asked to or approached to or coordinated or collaborated with somebody else to write songs that looks even outside of Queen. Like that looks like something that may have happened. I'm not sure because we're in this state of asking him to think about the future. All right, so that's the opening of the of the Oscars. Now, what about the lead actor, Rami Malek? Let's talk about Rami. In one of the previous channeling videos that we did, you mentioned it was actually the channeling video called Freddie Mercury being human channel. And you mentioned that you didn't haunt Freddie, but you guided him. You gave him support. Can you talk about that a little bit? And how do you feel about him portraying you and about him getting all these awards because it wasn't just the Oscars. He won lots of different awards for his for his portrayal of Freddie Mercury. It says, oh, I think he did a good job. You know, it's hard to be someone you're not. You know, it's hard to to pretend to be someone else. I suppose he says, although in a way performing is a bit like acting, you bring out the the parts of you that the audience needs or that that they expect. So in a way, I suppose it's natural for many. Rami Rami is a decent person. He definitely has integrity and he's making me feel like Freddie is making me feel like there's trust there, like he trusted him. And he said, he certainly talked to me a lot. He said, he certainly asked for my input and my guidance. Well, did you respond? So he talked to you and he asked for your input of guidance. He says a lot, oh a lot. And you were, did you respond? And how did you respond? Well, I made him feel like me. I made him feel the way that I would feel. I shared with him what you would consider energy, Bridget, but I shared with him. And in that way, I suppose I inspired, motivated whatever word you would like to use. And in his performance. So did you agree with the way he portrayed you? And he says, well, he did as much as he was allowed to do. Yes. Flamboyant is a word that comes forward. I don't want to like that word, but like being really, you know, expressive and that kind of a thing. He says he was only able to do what he was allowed to do. And he says, but I think he says, I will give him, I will give him a lot of credit. He said that takes a lot of courage to do what he did and to even dare to become me, to become someone that you're not sure how the people who are still alive, the family and the friends and, you know, queen, the members of the band, they were lovely to him, they were lovely, lovely to him, very supportive, quite supportive. I want people, I would like people to know that. He says, but to stretch yourself so much into a place where you're actually comfortable being not in your own skin, and he's referring to the costuming, not in your own skin. Rami mentions that, I think, I think he's talked about that before, about the, not risque, but the really interesting costumes. You know, he says, oh yeah. He says, well, he says, but he had a good time. He says he had a good time. And it feels to me like he learned a lot to Freddie, that he learned a lot from expanding and getting into the character and getting out of his normal life roles. And that's what actor's jobs are, and how good they are at that, how good they are at becoming someone else, morphing into someone else, is what gives them the accolades and the recognition, like with the Oscars, you know, it's the Academy, so it's the Hollywood that gives it to him, and that's, you know, that recognition must feel really good. He says, you know, the awards don't matter as much as, he says, the people that come to support you. He says, it doesn't, the awards just, you know, they catch, he says they catch dust on the shelf. And what really matters is that people want to hear your music or want to see your movie. Well, that's exactly what they did, Freddie, because it was Bohemian Rhapsody. It was all about you and your band, you know. He says, you know, he says, I know there's a lot that wasn't covered or wasn't said or shared or, you know, put on display in the cinema, he says, on the big screen, he says, but nobody needs that. That's not that kind of in-your-face kind of flagrant display. He says, nobody needed that. He says, so he's speaking to the people or the fans who kind of criticized the movie to say, oh, it didn't show enough about Freddie Mercury's private life and his wild parties and his crazy ways and only made inferences of things and his lifestyle and such. But he is saying that that doesn't need to be, why does that need to be something that is in your face and the focus when the focus, he says, you know, he's making me feel like, he's not saying it out loud, I feel it. He's making me feel like the focus of your life, of his life was music and making music and bringing that to the people who wanted the music and who loved it and who enjoyed it and the creative process of making it. So this whole cycle, he says of the creating and the sharing and the receiving and the energy of it and all that, he says that was the whole point and he says of my life, he says that was the point of my life, not all this other stuff. Was it a part of life? Yes, that's what human life is about, a lot of different things. But does that need to be like plastered on the big screen so that everybody can focus on that and forget about the whole purpose of his life? No. So he is quite alright with the way things were depicted, just so you guys know. It wasn't like too tamed for him necessarily or he doesn't have like a judgment about that. So I just wanted to share that with you guys. I think it's important because I know some of the viewers will appreciate that. All right, Freddie, is there anything else? Do you want to see a, can we see a Queen 2 movie or something? He says no, no, I think. I think we've about done it now, he says. Is there anything you'd like to or you'd like to say to your bandmates, to Roger or Brian or John or, yeah, let's start with them instead of mentioning the new front singers. They did right by me. I would just, he says gratitude, like I feel this incredible amount of gratitude. He says they did right by me and he says we were a family and there was a lot of love. He said there's a lot of love, there's so much love there. He said there still is, so much love there for all of them, everyone, everyone of them. And they feel that. He says they know that, they know me, they feel me, they know me. What do you think about Adam Lambert? He's the new singer. I think I talked about this in another video but it's been a while. Oh yes, there's a video on the playlist about you and your band. So we kind of touched on this topic before. He says, he's bringing me back to like Rami Malik becoming him for the movie, same thing for Adam Lambert. He doesn't, he wouldn't expect, he's saying, he wouldn't expect him to be, he says I don't expect him to be me. He can't be me. There's only one, Freddie Mercury, only one, he says. He can't be me. What do you think of his voice? Oh, it's quite nice. He says it's nice. It's beautiful. It's beautiful. Beautiful, he says. Is there anything else there? It kind of feels like to me, Freddie, it's a job for him. You know, I don't know if it's like this. I mean, I know it's a really big deal, but I don't know if he feels, maybe he doesn't feel worthy of it. I don't know, but it doesn't seem, he doesn't really feel cohesive with it, you know, with the band and such. It's kind of like how when Journey, Journey when Steve Perry left, it took a long time to get somebody in there that just really fit, you know, better than some of the temporary people did. And I don't, I couldn't think of anyone else that could fit, you know, fell those shoes. He says, yeah, he says, you know, you can't expect people to be just be exactly the same. There's just not, he says, there's not that. It doesn't work like that. You know, it doesn't work like that. So he doesn't channel you. Adam Lambert doesn't channel you. He says, no, no, no. Afraid not, he doesn't know. He says, okay. He says, but it's not like that. So it's okay. It's all right. He says, as a peer kind of a thing, it's like there's a respect there, but there's not a, he doesn't have any judgments again about it either way. You know, he says it's up to the band. It's up to the band what they do, what works for them, what feels best for them. It's really up to the band. And technically, he's good. And he's got what it takes technically is what he says. But the relationship piece and stuff, you know, he says that takes years to build that, you know. Although I'm going to say you say that, but Rami did it very quickly with the band. He says, yeah, it's a little different, isn't it? Maybe because he asked for your help. And he kind of just looks up and smiles. That's it. All right, this is Bridget. You have been listening and watching here at Above Life Channel, a conversation with Freddie Mercury in the afterlife. We're talking about the Oscars from 2019 and some of his responses to that. Again, this particular channel wasn't a word for word verbatim channel where I'm listening and I hear the words and I share it with you. The way that I work very comfortably with Freddie Mercury in the afterlife and many of my other afterlife guests, it's through the heart, through sensing and feeling the information and then sharing it with you, translating energy and feeling of the message and the information into words. And that's really, quite frankly, how most of you are intuitive is that way. And so you've seen kind of both because of course I'm clairvoyant, so I see him, so I describe what he's doing, his gestures, his mannerisms, how his emotions are and such on his face, so to speak. Look, how he's being represented. But also there are some specific words that also come in as well. So there's a little bit of the clairaudience, but most of it's clarsentient, feeling, sensing information, energy, and translating that into a spoken word, but then also the clairvoyance, which is the site as well. So I think it probably helps you guys to understand or know that. All right. So what did you think? Did you watch the Oscars? What did you think of the band performing? They opened the show. What did you think of the Queen performance? And also what did you think? How did you feel about Rami Malek winning, winning the Best Actor award? How did you feel about that? Big heart emojis on that one or, hmm, yeah, I think it was good or it was okay, that kind of thing. It's okay to be honest in the comments. Just don't be mean. Don't be rude. All right. This is Bridget. Thanks so much for watching. Be sure to give a like, a thumbs up, and share it with others you think would be inspired or interested in this particular video channeling session. Thanks for watching.