Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

Eric Clapton Believes People Are Tricked Into Getting COVID-19 Vaccine By “Mass Formation Hypnosis”

Eric Clapton has made another controversial statement regarding COVID-19 vaccinations.

Eric Clapton believes the theory that people who opted to get vaccinated against COVID-19 fell for "mass formation hypnosis".

The 'Layla' hitmaker — who previously revealed he lost friends due to his anti-vaccine stance — has claimed that subliminal messaging hidden in advertising led people to get the jab.

In an interview for The Real Music Observer YouTube channel, he said: “I didn’t get the memo.

"Whatever the memo was, it hadn’t reached me. Then I started to realise there was really a memo, and a guy, Mattias Desmet [professor of clinical psychology at Ghent University in Belgium], talked about it. And it’s great. The theory of mass formation hypnosis. And I could see it then. Once I kind of started to look for it, I saw it everywhere.

“Then I remembered seeing little things on YouTube which were like subliminal advertising. It had been going on for a long time: that thing about ‘you will own nothing and you will be happy.’ And I thought, ‘What’s that mean?’ And bit by bit, I put a rough kind of jigsaw puzzle together. And that made me even more resolute."

Psychologists have insisted there is no evidence to suggest a “mass formation psychosis” has occurred amid the global pandemic.

The 76-year-old guitar legend is anti-lockdown and had pledged not to perform at gigs where proof of immunisation against coronavirus is required to attend, despite being double-jabbed.

In an interview with The Daily Star in November, the 'Wonderful Tonight' hitmaker — who is father to daughters Ruth, 37, Julie, 20, Ella, 19, and 16-year-old Sophie — said: "My family and friends think I am a crackpot anyway.

"Over the last year, there's been a lot of disappearing — a lot of dust around, with people moving away quite quickly.

"It has, for me, refined the kind of friendship I have.

"And it's dwindled down to the people that I obviously really need and love.

"Inside my family, that became quite pivotal ... I've got teenage girls, and an older girl who's in he thirties - and they've all had to kind of give me leeway because I haven't been able to convince any of them."

Clapton — who is married to Melia McEnery — added: "I would try to reach out to fellow musicians and sometimes I just don't hear from them.

"My phone doesn't ring very often.

"I don't get that many texts and e-mails anymore."

— BANG SHOWBIZ

Photo: TPG News/Click Photos

 

Related topics

Hollywood Eric Clapton COVID-19

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.