#1574 - Jacques Vallée & James Fox

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Jacques Vallée

2 appearances

Jacques Vallée is a venture capitalist, technologist, and prominent figure in the field of unidentified aerial phenomena. His new book is Forbidden Science 6: Scattered Castles, The Journals of Jacques Vallee 2010-2019. www.jacquesvallee.net

James Fox

3 appearances

James Fox is a UFO investigator and documentary filmmaker. His new film, “The Program,” is available to stream now. https://geni.us/TheProgram

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Timestamps

0:00Introductions, Jacques Vallée’s UFO background, and James Fox’s path from Roswell to investigating crashes
9:58Continuation: Roswell cover-up claims and scientific analysis of alleged crash materials
19:54Continuation: Roswell wreckage, secret analysis, and skepticism about alien-derived technology

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Transcript

0:00

the Joe Rogan experience train by day Joe Rogan podcast by night all day

0:09

gentlemen James Jacques welcome thanks for being here we'll explain what this

0:20

is all about because

0:21

on the new Spotify podcast we don't really have an intro the same way the old

0:25

ones did James you

0:27

produced a phenomenal documentary on the phenomenon on what's going on with UFOs

0:33

and I just sent you an

0:35

article that my friend Sagar sent me today about a photograph a very clear

0:41

photograph that they've

0:42

taken of this triangular UFO so there's something that we'll be talking about

0:48

in a little bit Jacques

0:49

Vallée you have been studying this most of your life too long too long we

0:54

discussed it

0:57

last night at dinner that your interest in this came from an experience that

1:01

you actually had as a

1:03

child you actually saw a UFO as a teenager with two other witnesses one of the

1:09

witnesses was half a

1:11

mile away with binoculars so I'm pretty sure that that that object was real and

1:17

it was a classic disc

1:19

middle of the afternoon clear sky absolutely clear at the time I became

1:25

convinced that it might be a

1:27

prototype of something that would be coming out later and you know we're here

1:34

many years later and we

1:37

still don't have anything like that it was just hovering and was fair and what

1:41

you've been studying this for

1:43

so long and this is something you guys talked about in the film that you were

1:46

actually the character that

1:48

the French UFO researcher in close encounters of the first kind or the third

1:52

kind rather was modeled

1:53

after the Steven Spielberg film Spielberg was intrigued with the idea of a of a

1:58

character that was not quite as

2:01

weird as you know the ETS but was a lot weirder than you know the the people on

2:08

the ground in the US trying to make sense of

2:11

this in the military and so on so he needed this intermediate character he

2:16

thought you know Frenchman was was a

2:18

right thing to do and so did you talk to him about the film did you talk to him

2:23

about

2:23

when when he was putting it together and yeah I journalist put us together when

2:30

about halfway through the you know the final final shooting of the film and

2:37

there

2:38

were there were gaps in the movie at that point and we so we had lunch twice

2:43

together and it was was a lot of fun he was at the time he was looking for a

2:50

transition between the time when they they know the you know the big thing is

2:56

coming the mothership is coming and they don't know where and the mothership is

3:02

sending signals but they can't decipher the signals and I he said you know he

3:07

had

3:08

spent the morning at the jet propulsion laboratory and he said he couldn't make

3:13

any sense of all the mathematics they had and I said well maybe you can have

3:18

you

3:19

know two screens that give you an angle and and the angle tells you where the

3:24

thing is and he said now that's too complicated you know and takes too long

3:29

right it's got to be just a few minutes in the film and then I thought of a

3:35

photograph that was on the desk of Dr Hynek you know Dr Jay Hynek who was the

3:41

Air Force consultant on UFOs at the time and I was working with him building

3:45

databases and so on and on that photograph there were three guys you know

3:51

really well-dressed on ladders around a huge sphere of the earth in the lobby

4:00

of

4:00

some building somewhere with pieces of string that they were they were putting

4:04

the string over the earth and I I told Dr Hynek I said Alan you know what's the

4:12

story behind this and and he said well the when the first Sputnik was launched

4:17

you

4:17

know October 57 nobody had a computer program to compute an orbit but they knew

4:24

where the the Sputnik had been seen nobody expected the Russians to come up

4:29

with this

4:30

and they needed to know where it was going next so they the New York Times

4:36

called the

4:37

director of Harvard Observatory saying can you give us a comment on the Russian

4:43

satellite and the guy said hey it's three o'clock in the morning you know what

4:47

Russian satellite and so they got dressed in a hurry and they they were trying

4:52

to

4:53

compute the orbit by putting a string around the around the model of the earth

4:58

in the lobby of the of Harvard and I thought it was so funny and and Spielberg

5:04

said

5:04

that's it you know that's it the the general says come on you know you know the

5:10

the geographer who is the interpreter of the French of a French guy says well

5:17

it

5:17

looks like it's somewhere in Wyoming you know but we're in Wyoming you know

5:21

where

5:22

should we go and the the general says you mean we've got ten billion dollars

5:27

worth of radar and you know cameras and everything else nobody's got a map of

5:31

Wyoming and they break into the lobby of the building next door and they come

5:37

back with this globe and you know and they've got the globe and they they look

5:41

at it look at it and get their coordinates and because they it turns out the

5:46

geographer tells them you know those signals they look like a longitude and a

5:51

latitude so they they they Chris you know they they get the point where it's

5:56

going to be and that's that was a piece that was missing in in the movie so I

6:02

was

6:02

really proud of that you know it was it was really fun well so it's a the

6:06

one funny part in the movie yeah it's a great movie and it's a it is probably

6:12

the

6:12

movie that got me most excited about UFOs when I was a kid and I remember

6:16

thinking if UFOs were coming here from another planet one thing that I remember

6:20

thinking is why would they even bother talking to the government like what do

6:23

they care who the government is like if if I was looking at an ant colony I'm

6:28

not

6:29

gonna ask the ant colony which one's the the elected official that's in charge

6:32

of

6:33

all the other ants you don't give a shit you're just like trying to study the

6:36

ants

6:36

and I felt like if something was coming here from another planet that was so

6:41

sophisticated it could either travel from another dimension or travel from

6:45

another galaxy

6:46

why would it care like who the president is or who the generals are you know

6:51

not

6:51

only that but the witnesses don't talk to the government either no by now the

6:55

witnesses are tired of being ridiculed by scientists and you know by and told

7:02

that

7:02

those things don't exist so they don't they don't talk so they'll talk to you

7:07

know

7:07

people like you people like me because they trust you know they they trust me

7:13

and in

7:14

Silicon Valley you know you wouldn't believe the number of people who come to

7:19

me you

7:20

know including CEOs of companies that I've worked with would tell me about

7:24

sightings that

7:25

people in their family have had or sightings they had including you know sightings

7:31

in Vietnam for

7:32

example and so on when they were in the military that have never been reported

7:38

and and the government

7:39

isn't getting that when you first started studying this James when you started

7:45

studying this phenomenon when you were thinking that you're gonna put together

7:48

this this movie what you've done other documentaries on UFOs what what got you

7:55

into this so I had a really good friend of mine who was a high school buddy

7:59

this guy

8:00

Renee we traveled around Europe together after we graduated from high school

8:04

and in

8:06

our early 20s he told me about this UFO crash in Roswell in New Mexico and I

8:15

literally thought at the time I'm gonna have to write this guy off I've lost my

8:18

best

8:19

friend he's lost his mind and and that was that and I sort of walked away

8:24

thinking God

8:25

if we've had such a great friendship I'm so sorry this guy's gone and I brought

8:29

it up

8:29

with a guy that I was mentoring he was my mentor at a production facility

8:33

excuse me

8:34

production facility in California this guy Richard and he goes oh yeah Roswell

8:38

yeah

8:39

that was an alien spaceship it crashed I mean the government admitted it I mean

8:43

they

8:43

they they put the story out themselves these guys with a the only bomb unit in

8:49

the world the 509th exclusively responsible for the deployment of atomic

8:53

weapons these guys would not mistake an everyday weather balloon for a flying

8:56

saucer he goes that actually happened and I went really so then I started

9:01

looking

9:01

into it before I knew it I started making a movie Wow so what like when you

9:09

heard

9:09

about Roswell and you you've investigated it now and you've got into what do

9:14

you

9:14

think that was well I can only go by the people that were there and major Jesse

9:21

Marcel was one of the first military officers on the scene he's part of the

9:25

509th and major Marcel said the debris was strewn over an extremely large area

9:32

and

9:32

it was material that was not of this earth and he described the the the

9:39

material was

9:39

once one chunk in particular was three to four feet long three feet wide light

9:46

as a

9:46

feather you could barely feel it in your hands when you carried it but they

9:49

couldn't destroy it with a blowtorch they couldn't destroy it with this photo

9:53

you're showing us right now Jamie is the debris that they threw on the floor

9:57

that

9:58

was clearly just aluminum foil and sticks and stuff from a weather balloon that's

10:02

the fake debris yeah well there's two stories right there was a story that came

10:06

out the first day that said we've recovered a crashed UFO and then there's a

10:10

story that came out the second day whoops it was a weather balloon and this was

10:14

after they had taken the wreckage and they flew it to Wright-Patterson Air

10:17

Force

10:17

Base and it wasn't what you would do with wreckage from a weather balloon what

10:22

they'd done is they'd flown it in two separate jets or planes I don't know if

10:27

there were any jets back then two separate planes to make sure that they had

10:31

at least some of it like if one of them crashed they at least had some of this

10:35

stuff and to this day there's people that were there that swear that this was

10:41

something that was from an alien world and then you've got all the debunkers

10:46

and

10:46

all the other people that swear that it's nonsense and that people are just

10:50

making things up and they get a lot of attention from this and so they're you

10:53

know they've been telling these stories for decades and they might even believe

10:58

it themselves but it's all bullshit well my approach to that is you know no

11:04

single case and I think the scientists are not completely to blame there no

11:10

single case can can prove either that we're being visited or even that there is

11:17

a

11:17

phenomenon here on earth that we still need to be discovering you you need to I've

11:23

been trained to look for patterns you know my my background is in artificial

11:27

intelligence and computer science and you look for patterns whether it's in

11:32

medicine in business you know in in in other fields in physics and one case

11:39

even as as

11:40

good as was well is you know that doesn't do it so I've been looking for other

11:46

cases

11:46

that can reinforce the pattern and reveal you know what is what is really

11:53

behind it

11:53

because the idea that it's just ET coming here that doesn't really answer all

11:59

the

11:59

questions we have well it seems like there's been so many reports over time and

12:05

it's so difficult to find out who's telling the truth and who's not because

12:08

many of these are just

12:09

anecdotal stories they're just eyewitness accounts and we know people are

12:15

occasionally or quite often full of shit it's just that's just a part of people

12:21

they lie and they make things up I wanted to put the cap on Roswell because

12:25

what

12:26

people don't realize is that they announced to the world that they recovered a

12:31

flying saucer there had been a whole massive wave in the 40s and late 40s and

12:34

this is

12:35

following the detonation of the first atomic bombs yeah the tests you know the

12:41

and then

12:42

the atomic bombs that were dropped on Japan yeah so we had the Trinity site

12:47

1945 and

12:48

then there were two bombs dropped and that was from the Enola Gay which was

12:52

stationed at Roswell New Mexico in in 47 when this incident occurred they

12:57

announced

12:58

they told the truth to the world that's a fact they were flying the debris to

13:02

Wright-Patterson air force

13:03

base there was no cover-up it was all out in the open with a quick stop in Fort

13:07

Worth when they got to Fort Worth they had a debris filled in their B-29 bomber

13:12

General Major Marcel gets off the airplane and General Roger Ramey there's a flurry

13:18

of press activity and he says keep your mouth shut let me handle this grab some

13:23

debris from an everyday weather balloon throws it on the floor he says keep

13:27

your mouth shut

13:27

and they pose with DuBose Colonel DuBose and with Major General Major Ron

13:33

Marcel and General Ramey two out of the three people came clean on camera

13:38

before they died and said that was a fake press conference that was fake debris

13:42

what we recovered was the initial story that came out was true it was not of

13:47

this world now what is the current understanding of what happened to that

13:53

debris

13:53

you know in back in Silicon Valley we're sort of there's a group of people who

14:08

are getting really interested in this because we've got new technology to

14:13

analyze materials and we've got materials from a number of similar incidents

14:19

again what we're looking for and it's hard to do okay it's only now that we've

14:28

really got equipment scientific equipment that can can really look at this the

14:33

characteristics of I mean materials are the same throughout the universe I mean

14:41

iron from Mars is just like iron from you know from the earth

14:46

the isotopes the isotopes would be the isotopes are the isotopes are the you

14:51

know the the components that define the the orbits of the you know of the atom

14:53

and that what goes into the nucleus of the atom they would be the same ones in

14:53

outer space when they are on the earth okay

14:53

what could change would be if somebody was altering artificially the ratio of

15:01

the isotopes within the

15:01

so it gets pretty complicated we're doing we're doing we're doing we're doing a

15:08

survey of all the samples that we have from a number of crashes like Roswell

15:08

Roswell was well was well was well was well was not unique it was not unique in

15:15

New Mexico and now we have we have samples from

15:15

Europe we have samples from south america

15:22

we have samples from south america

15:24

there are a number of people who have started to look at that

15:26

and now we have samples from south america

15:28

there are a number of people who have started to look at that

15:29

there were publications by a professor from Stanford

15:31

professor Sturrock 30 years ago about material recovered from brazil

15:36

We have samples from Europe. We have samples from South America.

15:41

There are a number of people who have started to look at that.

15:45

There were publications by a professor from Stanford, Professor Sturrock, 30

15:50

years ago, about material recovered from Brazil, where, again, the isotopes

15:56

were measured.

15:58

I'm the guy who – the French volunteered to measure the isotope ratios, and I

16:05

carried that precious little sample to Paris to get it to the people who were

16:12

doing the experiments.

16:13

The jury is still out. Obviously, somebody could take common elements, refine

16:20

the isotopes, and put them back together.

16:26

Of course, that was done for the atom bomb, you know, between different isotopes

16:31

of uranium, you know, and you have to differentiate between, you know, which

16:38

– what goes into really making the bomb.

16:42

And now you can buy – for medicine, for example, you can buy radioisotopes in

16:47

small quantities, but they cost, you know, an enormous amount for a few grams.

16:54

So, if we find that some of those samples have been altered, that's a

16:58

revolution, because it means that there is somebody somewhere, either on Earth

17:03

or off planet, who has the technology to do that for a particular purpose.

17:10

If we find that, that's a revolution.

17:12

But did they find that with Roswell?

17:16

So, is there any record of what happened with the wreckage, what was studied,

17:21

what they discovered?

17:23

So, you have to go in two directions.

17:27

First, you don't need something, you know, three feet by five feet to do that.

17:32

You can do it on a few grams, okay?

17:35

We've got instruments now, new instruments, that were created by some of the

17:41

people that I work with that can just do it at the biological level, you know,

17:47

like almost a level of, you know, a few grams or a few milligrams.

17:51

So, we're in the process of doing that.

17:55

And, in fact, the book that I'm preparing is going to talk about that.

18:01

The other thing is, you know, where would the big thing go?

18:07

You know, we don't have the big thing.

18:09

Well, you know, after a few years, people talk.

18:14

And, again, both in Silicon Valley and other places, scientists need to talk to

18:21

each other.

18:23

And I've had discussions with people who handle that material.

18:29

One of them I can tell you about was a very high-level engineering manager in a

18:37

large company that has research labs in Silicon Valley.

18:43

He was asked 30 years ago to look at some material.

18:47

And he described to me what that was.

18:51

And, actually, he showed it to me.

18:55

He said it was a matrix of orthosilicates, and he could not understand the deep

19:02

structure.

19:03

I mean, he could analyze it in his lab.

19:06

He was a man who developed the magnetic coating for discs and tapes.

19:15

So, I don't need to tell you how many billions of dollars of business those

19:19

companies that he worked with, you know, made based on his patents.

19:26

So, he had a good lab, and he was able to do the analysis.

19:32

He could not understand the deep structure of that material.

19:36

Now, the problem that the people who have those vehicles have is they will,

19:43

because it's top secret, they have to compartmentalize everything.

19:48

So, one company would get the material, another company might get some

19:54

descriptions of maybe the beings, another company might get something that

20:00

looks like fiber optics or electronics and so on.

20:04

They wouldn't put, only a few people would be able to put all the information

20:08

together.

20:10

That's not a good way to do research, not a good way to do science.

20:14

We've got to get that stuff to the scientific community and open it up.

20:18

Well, this is what Bob Lazard said about working at Area S4, that that was the

20:23

problem they were having.

20:24

One group was working on propulsion.

20:26

The other group was working on metallurgy.

20:29

But this material that this gentleman had seen, where he couldn't identify the

20:33

structure, what was that, and where was it from?

20:36

It was from a crash.

20:39

From a crash where?

20:40

He didn't tell me.

20:41

He didn't tell you?

20:42

No.

20:42

But they had, and he had gotten it through what method?

20:46

He had been asked on a secret project to do the analysis.

20:52

So, this had been something the government had brought to him?

20:55

He had a lab that was unique in the United States.

20:59

And, you know, that was, he was the appropriate guy.

21:02

Is it possible that this could have been some material that was created by a

21:07

foreign government that has an extremely advanced understanding of these

21:13

materials?

21:14

If it had been, that material would have been used by now.

21:18

And we've never seen that material again.

21:21

And what year was this, when he did the study?

21:22

I don't know when he did the study.

21:26

He's dead now, so he's not going to be, you know, thrown in jail for.

21:30

Right. And because this is all top secret.

21:32

You know, look, in Silicon Valley, people from different companies and so on

21:38

get together, and they, you know, they look at things together.

21:42

And they, you know, they trust you, you know, because then you need to get

21:47

different minds on the same, on the same page.

21:50

Right.

21:51

And so that conversation was over 20 years ago.

21:56

I've never forgotten it.

21:58

I had another conversation with a military man who is, you know, retired now,

22:05

who told me that he was brought in to a large hangar where there were pieces of

22:13

things that looked like a vehicle.

22:16

And there was a wing that would have been, you know, the size of this table,

22:23

and he could lift it with one hand.

22:25

It was, again, very light, you know, like what James was saying about Roswell,

22:30

extremely light material that was very, very strong.

22:34

But still today, we don't have anything like that.

22:37

We've got fancy titanium things and so on.

22:41

But he was, he knew what technology went into, you know, our advanced aircraft.

22:48

He was with the Air Force.

22:49

And he couldn't believe that he could lift that entire metal, you know, surface

22:55

with one hand.

22:56

So what is the current speculation on where the wreckage from Roswell went?

23:00

Like, as far as people know, what people do talk, like, clearly, if there was

23:05

some material that was recovered that was from an alien spacecraft, it must be

23:10

somewhere.

23:12

It would, well, typically, the way, you know, a secret project works, if you

23:21

look at other projects that we know now how they were handled,

23:27

like the submarine, you know, the Russian submarine that was recovered.

23:30

And it would go to different places because you'd send different parts to the

23:40

best experts, absolutely the best world experts in those people you already

23:46

have under contract.

23:48

And you might not tell them, you know, where it comes from.

23:53

You might tell them, this is something, you know, one of our guys got this out

23:57

of Czechoslovakia, you know, and we think it's Russian stuff from a MiG, you

24:03

know, and why don't you analyze it?

24:06

They would, they wouldn't necessarily tell you that it comes from a UFO,

24:10

whatever UFOs are.

24:12

Ask Jacques where the bodies are.

24:15

Okay, but hold on.

24:16

This, this, does anybody, is anybody speculating as to where the material from?

24:23

Roswell is, like, is there, is there a legend?

24:26

Is there rumor?

24:29

Not something that would pass, you know, that the scientists would really,

24:34

really look at.

24:39

You know, in, in the 40s, there, there was, you know, there were people working

24:47

on advanced materials for ultralight aircraft, for rockets.

24:53

You know, the, the transistor, people say, look at the transistor, we must have

24:58

gotten this from the aliens.

25:01

Well, the, well, the patent for the transistor is a German patent from 1934,

25:07

you know, the German scientist discovered the transistor effect, and he

25:12

described it, and, but nobody, nobody had any need for that.

25:17

I mean, there was no electronics in 1934, so nobody really had any need for it.

25:22

And then the electronics was in glass tubes, and so on and so on.

25:25

So, that, that was rediscovered, you know, by, at Bell Labs, by the people who

25:32

patented the transistor in the US.

25:36

That was one of the big UFO conspiracy theories, was that some of the

25:40

technology that was recovered from Roswell was used and back-engineered to

25:46

create transistors, and they did this at Bell Labs, and there was a company

25:50

called the American Computer Company that had a whole website dedicated to

25:54

explaining where some of the technology that we currently use came from, and

25:59

they had the, they were all in on this conspiracy that it came from Roswell.

26:03

I don't, I don't, I don't, I don't think you would find too many people in

26:07

Silicon Valley who would believe that, because they, you know, some of the

26:12

people from Bell Labs, you know, came West, and some of them are still alive,

26:16

and they would tell you how it happened.

26:19

And if you, when you look at the old films, the old movies from Bell Labs, you

26:24

know, you can, you can see what they were doing, and it, it's, it's kind of

26:28

laughable.

26:29

I mean, it's, you know, it's, you know, high school physics, you know, hooking

26:34

up the thing with big wires and so on, and this was not really advanced stuff,

26:38

but they, they, they understood the transistor effect, which was known since

26:42

the 30s.

26:43

It was not, it was not new science, it was just something that had never been,

26:49

you know, required by industry to develop because, you know, the amplifiers

26:55

worked fine, you know, and there was no real need for it.

26:59

When there was a need, then they started working on that.

27:02

Well, that's one of the big rumors, right, is the transistor.

27:05

Well, that was one of the fibers, you know, fiber optics, Colonel Corso, who

27:14

was someone I, you know, respect and admire, revealed that he was in charge for

27:24

the Army of getting,

27:26

he got a lot of, and somebody gave him a, you know, a cardboard box, literally,

27:31

full of stuff that came from places like Roswell, and they were fibers.

27:36

And when you put a light at one end, you know, the light would go to the end of

27:41

the fibers.

27:41

Well, that effect has been known, you know, in physics for a long time.

27:47

So, again, that's not, that doesn't prove anything.

27:51

I had that conversation with Corso, spent two days with him, thanks to Mr. Bigelow,

27:56

you know, he, we brought him to Las Vegas to, you know, talk to the science

28:03

board of Bigelow Aerospace.

28:06

And then I had some private conversations with him about some other things that

28:11

were not in his book.

28:13

But the fiber, you know, I told him, frankly, you know, fibers, glass fibers

28:19

were known before World War II.

28:22

People used them for, in lab work and so on.

28:28

So that's not really new.

28:31

It's not really proof.

28:32

And he said, look, I, you know, I'm not a scientist, you know, I'm a military

28:36

guy, but I was asked by, you know, the head of the lab to preserve this and to,

28:42

and what he did is to give it to different labs, you know, give it to MIT, give

28:48

it to, I don't know, Battelle, give it to a few others.

28:52

And what happened when he did that?

28:54

I don't know what happened.

28:56

I interviewed Colonel Corso.

28:57

Do you believe him?

28:58

Yes.

28:59

Okay, so I interviewed Colonel Corso on camera in 1997 in Roswell.

29:03

It was right at the 50th anniversary of the Roswell event.

29:06

There was a lot of hoopla around, around what had happened.

29:09

And he told me on camera, A, that he saw these bodies that he assumed were

29:13

childlike, these big heads and eyes, you know, in a warehouse somewhere.

29:18

But he described the materials, what he said to me, and I'm not saying this is

29:21

true or not true, but what he said to me was that they were shocked at the lack

29:25

of provisions on the craft, that the bodies had no reproductive organs, slits

29:30

for mouths, no vocal cords.

29:33

There were these little pen-like things that later turned out to be lasers, and

29:38

there was this filament stringy stuff that was later to be determined to be

29:43

fiber optics, and that the material had this, you could crumple it up with

29:48

light as a feather, and then it would regain its original form.

29:54

That's what he told me on camera, and I think he died a year later.

29:58

He told that also to Paola Harris, who traveled with him, you know, in Europe,

30:04

and published his book in Italy and other languages.

30:09

His English book was censored by the publisher, and he died, really, I mean, he

30:15

was given the, you know, the proof, he had 24 hours to check the proof, he didn't

30:21

check everything, he didn't have time.

30:25

And there were parts that were missing, and parts that he had told me,

30:29

fortunately, you know, I can testify to what he told me, but the, you know, a

30:36

lot of what he knew

30:37

wasn't in the book that was published in the U.S.

30:41

It's in books that were published in other languages, you know, thanks to Paola,

30:46

to Paola Harris, who preserved all that, but there was, you know, still at that

30:52

stage, you know, there was some, you know, some tricks being played, not to get

30:58

all the information out.

31:00

And this is something Clinton looked into when he was a president, right?

31:04

President wouldn't necessarily be cleared.

31:06

That's hilarious.

31:07

To, I mean, to, number one, I, I, obviously, I don't know the facts, but.

31:14

You would think that if you get to the top office of the United States, that

31:18

you would get access to that, but I guess because it's transient, because they're

31:22

in and out.

31:23

Well, it's not a matter of curiosity, it's a matter of need to know, and you

31:28

also want to protect the president, and also the president changes every four

31:33

years.

31:34

And also there are three different classes of secrets, you know, there is,

31:40

there are secrets that are under the control of the president, there are

31:46

secrets that are under the control of the state department that have to do with

31:52

foreign intelligence that don't go through the same channels, and then there

31:58

are the atomic secrets.

32:00

And the, and the, the, the clearances for, you know, over the years I've

32:05

occasionally been cleared.

32:07

I was cleared for the, you know, under Mr. Rigolo, Mr. Bigolo.

32:14

But the, the, the, the, the, the clearances for atomic secrets are the P clearances,

32:23

the Q clearances, the R clearances, they are completely segregated from the

32:29

kind of clearances that we had as part of the, the, the, the, the, the BAS

32:36

project or the ATIP project.

32:37

So those people would not have been cleared for some of the scientific

32:42

information.

32:44

And I think we're getting to the point where we need to, somebody needs to open

32:50

up the doors and the windows and get the scientific community involved.

32:56

Well, it does seem like there's more openness now from the penthouse, right?

33:01

There was the one person who, who worked at the Pentagon that was saying that

33:08

there's, they've recovered crafts that are off world vehicles, not from this

33:13

earth.

33:13

Like that was a, that was a direct quote.

33:15

And then these photos that supposedly exist now from this new article that's

33:21

out that are top secret, but people are trying to get these photographs

33:25

released to the general public that show this triangular UFO this, but just

33:30

these kinds of statements and just the release of the go fast video.

33:33

And the other videos from the gimbal video that show these vehicles that are

33:39

being observed by these fighter jet pilots that are watching these things in

33:46

real time going, holy shit, what is that?

33:49

And you get to hear their words.

33:51

You get to see the video.

33:52

You see the actual object jetting across the, the, you know, the surface of the,

33:56

of the ocean and they don't know what it is.

33:58

And they're trying to figure it out while they're watching it.

34:02

That's never existed before.

34:03

There's never been this much openness.

34:05

So there's a new level of at least admitting that there's an issue, that there's

34:09

a phenomenon that didn't exist before.

34:12

You're talking about the U S yes.

34:14

In other countries, people have been a lot more open.

34:17

Yeah.

34:17

Including Russia, you know, I mean, and certainly including France.

34:22

I mean, there was one, one incident, 1978, a mirage, you know, a guy flying a

34:31

mirage.

34:32

Fulcano, French air force.

34:35

The mirage doesn't have any weapons.

34:37

It's just coming in to Dijon, you know, Dijon where the mustard comes from.

34:42

Okay.

34:42

Well, they happen to have, you know, a base, an atomic base there.

34:47

And the mirages are fighter bombers.

34:49

They can take, they can take nuclear ammunition.

34:52

He was unarmed.

34:54

He's flying at, you know, late afternoon, early evening.

35:00

No problem.

35:01

He sees a light at his two o'clock position.

35:03

Bright light.

35:05

Doesn't know what it is.

35:06

Gets bigger.

35:07

He thinks he sees a structure behind the light, but he was never really sure.

35:14

You know, there seems to be an object there.

35:16

Solid object.

35:17

But the light goes around him and stops up on his tail, which is a kill

35:25

position, you know, in, for a fighter, for a fighter jet.

35:30

He doesn't like that.

35:33

He takes evasive action, which he wasn't prepared to do.

35:37

I mean, he didn't have, you know, special suits or anything.

35:41

He dives.

35:42

The object starts moving again, goes around him, makes a 360-degree circle at

35:51

high speed.

35:53

And he can't believe it.

35:56

I mean, number one, there couldn't be a pilot because a pilot could be crushed.

35:59

But there is nothing that can move that fast.

36:03

And the thing is, back on his tail, he has to dive a second time.

36:06

Okay.

36:07

He lands in Dijon, writes a report.

36:10

Well, the report would probably not have come out, except that there was a,

36:15

there were a number of people on the ground who saw this happen, saw the whole

36:19

thing.

36:20

And there was a gendarme, you know, who was French police, a branch of, you

36:25

know, parallel to the French police, who wrote a report, and that report was

36:30

public.

36:31

So they interviewed, they found the pilot, they interviewed him.

36:35

I mean, there is no question that happened.

36:37

And this was 1978.

36:39

So, I mean, what else is new, okay, that we've got those things?

36:44

Well, what's new is we have footage, you know, and some of the footage that

36:49

James had in his, you know, in his movie that actually proves it.

36:54

But actually, you know, footage doesn't prove anything, because you can fake

36:58

the camera.

36:59

But when you have the pilots themselves and the footage and the instrumentation

37:04

and the radar, I mean, that thing was tracked on radar that saw the whole thing,

37:09

you know.

37:11

You don't, you don't really do that to a nuclear bomber.

37:16

Would you have something?

37:17

Yeah, so this is a breaking story.

37:19

And former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Intelligence, Christopher

37:23

Mellon, literally sent this to me about 15 minutes ago, and he wanted me to

37:28

read it verbatim.

37:29

So, I was going to read this.

37:30

It's pretty startling stuff.

37:31

So, I'll read it.

37:32

In the last 48 hours, the public has learned of two stunning incidents captured

37:38

on film by U.S. Navy carrier pilots earlier this year.

37:42

One of the cases features a photo of a bizarre flying sphere and a black cube

37:48

inside that is identical to dozens of other reports by Navy pilots.

37:54

These strange objects have been shadowing East Coast Naval Ops since 2015.

38:00

They sometimes maneuver in formation and have occasionally been reported

38:04

achieving supersonic speeds.

38:07

The other incident produced a stunning, detailed photograph of a massive,

38:12

triangular-shaped vehicle that emerged from the ocean and flew vertically,

38:18

straight up and out of sight, just past a Navy F-18 operating off the U.S.

38:23

aircraft carrier.

38:25

These iPhone photos taken by the pilots should be released to the public as

38:30

there are no sources and methods to protect, and the national security benefits

38:35

of raising awareness regarding this issue vastly outweigh any conceivable

38:40

benefit from concealing the information.

38:44

It is hard to believe that in the face of such radical and incredible

38:48

technology within our vast defense department, we only have a so-called task

38:53

force consisting of two individuals with no budget who are still being stiff-armed

38:59

for access to relevant and timely information by the Air Force and other

39:04

security organizations.

39:07

By comparison, 60 years ago, in response to Sputnik, America entered the space

39:12

race, which led to landing on the moon.

39:14

Our government needs to wake up and address the far greater technology gap that

39:19

these and many other incidents are revealing.

39:22

There is obviously a glaring strategic mismatch between the current task force

39:26

and the technology that has been identified.

39:29

Why did he send you this?

39:31

Because he felt it's a developing story, and he wants people to be aware that

39:34

there's really compelling evidence right now, photographically, that needs to

39:38

be released.

39:39

And so you told him you were coming on here, and that's when he sent it to you?

39:43

Yes, and he said that these people need to feel some pressure.

39:46

They need to know that we are requesting, not demanding, but requesting further

39:53

government transparency on this issue.

39:56

And he's very passionate about it.

39:58

He knows of these photographs.

39:59

The government's—we got the story, I think it was yesterday, and the

40:02

government is refusing to release these photographs.

40:05

The pilots want these photographs released.

40:07

The people that are involved with the incident want the photographs released.

40:10

And so we—he wants the public to know that these photographs exist and that

40:14

they should be released.

40:16

And they're currently in the possession of—

40:18

He wouldn't reveal that.

40:19

He knows the person, but he said that the government is not wanting them

40:22

released, and he feels that they—that we have a right to these photographs.

40:25

And there's video that came with this story as well.

40:28

Well, remember, this comes from the very guy who was strategic, Christopher Mellon,

40:34

in getting those videotaped evidence from the cockpits of those F-18 fighter

40:38

jets off the East Coast as well as off the West Coast in 2004, 2015,

40:42

and ended up with that big story on the front page of the New York Times in

40:46

2017.

40:47

Yeah, see, that's a new thing, because if you went to, like, 24 or 2004 when

40:55

this all happened, no one was really talking about UFOs in a serious manner.

41:03

Like, it was still something that would be mocked and ridiculed.

41:06

But to have it on the front page of the New York Times and to have this

41:10

spokesperson for the Pentagon say that they've recovered off-world vehicles,

41:15

not from this earth, not made on this earth.

41:18

Like, this is a—this is a change, right?

41:21

A really—I mean, even though it doesn't receive that much public attention

41:25

because it's all happening during a pandemic and everyone's just—and also the

41:30

news cycle today is so bizarre.

41:32

Something gets into the news cycle and then it's gone tomorrow because of a new

41:36

scandal or people find out Ellen's mean or whatever it is.

41:39

There's always something new that's coming out.

41:41

And these things, though, they seem to—it seems to be there's more of them

41:45

and more of them coming out.

41:47

And with each new story that comes out, people feel more emboldened to tell

41:50

their story.

41:51

You know, I think, personally, everything changed in December of 2017 when that

41:58

page—a front page of the New York Times revealed that secret ATIP program.

42:02

And I know, personally, because I've gotten ridiculed for decades for the work

42:07

I do, a lot less so recently, people are suddenly raising an eyebrow going, wow,

42:12

there's clearly something more to this than just, you know, radar weather

42:15

balloons and misidentified aircraft.

42:18

Jimmy, pull up the video that's in that article.

42:21

There's an actual YouTube video.

42:23

There's two.

42:24

One's from 94, one's from 2013.

42:26

Let's go with the 2013 one.

42:30

These videos are very strange.

42:34

You see these—this object.

42:35

What's interesting, too, is that—okay, this is the one that I didn't see, but

42:40

that this thing, the way it moves and behaves—the one that's from—I guess

42:44

it was from the 94 one.

42:45

This is the 2013 one.

42:46

This is the one from Puerto Rico.

42:48

So it's just kind of cruising across the sky.

42:51

It's hard to track here in this black and white.

42:55

There it is.

42:58

Does it estimate how fast this thing is supposedly going?

43:01

It looks like they were near some sort of, like, military base or something.

43:07

And on Aguadilla, which is, like, the west coast.

43:10

So weird to see.

43:13

Like, it's not clear what this thing is.

43:16

So one of the things that I think it's really good to establish—

43:20

Go—I'm sorry, but go further ahead in this video to see if maybe there's a

43:24

better version of it or a better—

43:25

I'll just sort of check. The other one has a little clearer video.

43:28

Yeah, there you go. That's much clearer.

43:34

Like, what is that?

43:36

That's not a bird.

43:39

Like, it's moving through the clouds.

43:42

One of the things I wanted to make a distinction of is the technology, the

43:45

observed technology that these guys are talking about.

43:48

So you've got objects with no wings, no visible means of propulsion, the

43:54

ability to hover, accelerate from a standstill to out of sight in the blink of

43:59

an eye, right angle turns at high speed, fly rings around our fastest jets.

44:03

That is the technology that cannot be confused or explained away as something

44:07

conventional.

44:08

So any time you see an object like we're looking at here, if it performs or

44:12

exhibits at that technology, maybe it shoots off at high rate of speed, does a

44:16

right angle turn at high speeds.

44:19

No wings, no tail, no propulsion, no sonic boom, almost no sound.

44:27

And they're trying to get a close-up on this thing so you get a better idea of

44:31

what the shape is.

44:32

It's very hard to tell.

44:33

But these objects, also, one of the weird things is it moves around the same

44:38

way Commander Fravor described that thing moving around that was hovering over

44:43

the ocean.

44:44

That it kind of darts around left and right, right and left, almost like it's

44:50

just not connected to whatever our atmosphere is.

44:55

It's like it's moving in this weird zigzag sort of a way.

44:59

This is an infrared image, right?

45:02

It's not visible.

45:04

It's not a normal camera.

45:05

I don't know.

45:09

I don't know what it is.

45:10

Is that what it looks like to you?

45:11

I think it's the same type of camera that has the one from the Nimitz.

45:16

So you're looking at the heat signature.

45:20

You're not really looking at the visual picture.

45:23

Right.

45:24

So that's why you cannot get a clear definition of it.

45:29

Well, they need better cameras.

45:31

So as you go further along in the video, they do get a better view of it.

45:37

There it is.

45:38

There you go.

45:40

Like, what the hell is that?

45:41

You know, that was one of the more startling moments of producing the film.

45:50

The phenomenon for me was when I met with Senator Harry Reid, who spearheaded

45:53

the ATIP program, the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program that

45:57

wound up on the front page of the New York Times.

46:00

I wasn't quite sure when I met with him where his comfort zone was, and so I

46:04

was really kind of cautious for the first half an hour of the interview.

46:07

But then we started to relax and get more comfortable with each other, and I

46:12

decided to kind of push it a little bit.

46:14

And I said, hey, Senator, I met with Gordon Cooper, who later became Mercury

46:20

astronaut, who told me on camera that there was a landing incident that took

46:26

place at Edwards Air Force Base, circa 1957, where they happened to have a

46:31

camera crew out near the dry lake bed capturing the installation of a new

46:35

landing facility for F-86 fighter jets.

46:37

And it was broad daylight, and all of a sudden this disk appears out of nowhere,

46:41

and the camera crew turned their cameras on it, and they filmed the landing of

46:45

this flying saucer on the dry lake bed at Edwards Air Force Base.

46:49

And I'm telling the story to Senator Reid, thinking, you know, I don't know how

46:53

he's going to react when I, but this is what I was, I have him on camera.

46:57

And I said that he has the film footage developed, it was good footage, he held

47:01

it up, he looked at it, it was a disk, you know, blah, blah, blah.

47:04

And eventually he gets a courier jet from Washington, D.C. that flies in, pick

47:09

up the footage.

47:10

Senator Reid goes, and it was never seen or heard from again.

47:14

And I said, yeah, exactly.

47:16

And I said, did you guys uncover stuff like that?

47:19

He goes, oh, yeah, it's all there.

47:21

It's, we, we, we have it, it's all there.

47:23

And then he goes to change the topic and talk about something else.

47:25

And I said, well, hold on, Senator, are you saying that there's evidence that

47:30

hasn't seen the light of day?

47:32

And he looked at me, and he kind of pauses, and he picks up his water bottle,

47:37

he drinks a sip of water, and that, that, that moment seemed like an hour, but

47:40

it was probably just a second or two.

47:42

And he puts his water bottle down, and he says, I'm saying that most of the

47:45

evidence hasn't seen the light of day.

47:47

So that, that for me was such a powerful moment, because I'm going, look at who

47:53

this is coming from.

47:55

This is the former head of, you know, Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid,

47:58

saying that the vast majority of evidence hasn't seen the light of day.

48:02

And if the president of the United States can't get access to it, as I found

48:06

out when I interviewed all the people around President Clinton, who can, who

48:10

has the authority to have this stuff released?

48:13

And that's something that I would love to know, and I've been trying to find

48:17

out.

48:19

So someone does, someone in some position of government or some intelligence

48:24

agency, someone in the Pentagon, someone or some group at the highest level of

48:30

clearance has access to this information and knows about it.

48:35

Absolutely. Senator Reid said they uncovered all this stuff during the program,

48:39

and he said the level of resistance that he got from the intelligence agencies

48:43

was insane.

48:43

Like, I mean, they did not want this project going forward at the Pentagon, but

48:47

they pushed and they pushed and they pushed and they got it through.

48:50

It started in 2007. It went all the way up until it ended up on the front page

48:54

of the New York Times in 2017.

48:56

Of course, now we know that there's another project, but Jacques, do you know

49:00

who has the authority to release this stuff to the general public?

49:04

No, no, not, not in, in this particular case.

49:10

Where are the bodies from Roswell?

49:12

I don't know. I mean, you know, all you have are rumors, you know, Walter Reed

49:19

Hospital in the basement, you know, I can't get to the basement of Walter Reed

49:25

Hospital.

49:26

Have you ever talked to anybody that's reputable, anybody that you believe that

49:30

seems to know?

49:31

Yes. Well, you know, there are physicians in the, you know, who, with clearances,

49:38

who have tried to get that information.

49:41

And to my knowledge, because I don't, they don't need to tell me everything.

49:48

But if there was, you know, if there is material evidence, like the kind of

49:55

thing I've got, okay, that witnesses have given to me, you know, that I went,

50:01

went out and dug it up, okay, so I know where it comes from, okay.

50:05

But if we found that it was really very strange, even beyond our ability to

50:11

manipulate the isotopes, that still doesn't prove that there isn't somebody who

50:17

is smarter than we are, somewhere on earth, making that stuff.

50:21

Okay, so I still couldn't stand, you know, at the Academy of Sciences and say,

50:26

look, this, this proves it.

50:28

But if we have bodies, I would think that if, if they have a different

50:35

structure from any organism that we know, you know, from biology on earth.

50:42

I mean, I would have to think that would be a revolution.

50:47

The strange thing.

50:48

Instantly.

50:48

Yes, instantly.

50:49

People would be confronted with it.

50:50

The strange thing is that the iconic image of an alien seems consistent.

50:55

That's one of the weird things, is that there's different versions of aliens

50:59

that people claim to see, but the iconic close encounters of the third kind,

51:04

large head, large eyes.

51:05

Yes.

51:06

Very thin body with no musculature, no genitals.

51:09

That all seems to be very consistent.

51:13

Correct.

51:13

Yeah, like the African landing case in Louis Zimbabwe in 1994.

51:17

That is a crazy part of your documentary because you see these children that

51:21

are going to school in Africa.

51:23

This thing lands and then they draw pictures of it.

51:28

The children are all consistent.

51:30

And then 20 years later, they all meet and talk about it again.

51:35

And now, when people lie, a lot of times when people lie, when they're making

51:39

up a crazy story like being abducted by a UFO, they want to be special.

51:43

They want to be different.

51:45

Like, I was the one they chose.

51:46

There's none of that from these kids.

51:48

They all have the same story.

51:49

They all have the same, you know, they didn't have the best drawing skills, but

51:52

they all drew something that's incredibly similar.

51:55

It was all classic looking UFO flying saucer type vehicle and a classic looking

52:00

iconic creature that is just like the Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

52:05

They all described something that looked like it was wearing a black wetsuit.

52:08

They all described something that had large eyes and a large head for its body.

52:13

I was doing my first documentary back in 1997 when I was just naive enough to

52:18

think I can get an interview with Steven Spielberg.

52:21

We had a mutual friend involved, this woman, Janet.

52:24

And she gets back to me and she's like, yeah, so Spielberg's definitely not

52:28

going to meet with you, but he knows you're working on this UFO documentary.

52:31

He thinks you should look into this landing case that happened in Africa at the

52:35

school.

52:36

And I said to myself at the time and remind, you know, remind you guys that I

52:40

was making a film on UFOs and I dismissed it so quickly because I thought there's

52:45

no way that a mass landing with the sheer volume of eyewitness testimony at a

52:51

school in broad daylight could happen in the whole world, not know about it.

52:56

So I just walked away from that story for about 10 years.

53:00

10 years later, I'm doing an event at the National Press Club with Leslie Cain,

53:04

who was part of the article in New York Times that came out in 2017.

53:09

And she introduced me to this guy, Randall Nickerson.

53:13

And she's like, oh, he's working on this landing case in Africa.

53:16

Long story short, he's working on a film now.

53:20

I think it's coming out next year specifically on just that case.

53:23

Dan Farah is producing it.

53:25

And he said, I'm working on the case.

53:29

And if you want to do something with me on it, a small piece, I could.

53:33

So I got back into it.

53:34

I licensed some of the footage that Dr. John Mack, the Harvard psychiatrist

53:38

that came and interviewed the schoolchildren on camera within a week of it

53:41

happening.

53:42

He unfortunately looked the wrong way in London, got run down by a car and died.

53:46

So I contacted the Institute with the help of Randall Nickerson.

53:50

I licensed the archival footage.

53:53

We tracked down the witnesses today.

53:55

We flew them in from all different corners of the world, brought them together.

53:59

A lot of them were standing right next to each other.

54:00

They came face to face.

54:02

And one of the things I realized was that there were roughly 100 kids in the

54:06

playground, broad daylight, aerial school, Rue, Zimbabwe, 1994.

54:10

And they got within some of them within arm's length of these beings and

54:15

brought these witnesses together for the first time in 20 years.

54:20

And a lot of them hadn't even told their significant others just because they

54:24

said they were tired of having to defend this.

54:27

And I, myself, didn't believe it when I first heard about it back in 1997.

54:31

And that segment of the film is the most, in my opinion, is the most powerful

54:37

segment.

54:38

It's very compelling.

54:39

You've got all these children saying what they saw on camera after it happened.

54:43

And then you see them 20 years later.

54:45

And then we go to Africa and we meet with the headmistress.

54:48

She was a teacher at the time.

54:50

We went with other witnesses.

54:51

We go to the landing site.

54:52

We talk to people at the school.

54:53

That case is absolutely.

54:55

And it was witnessed by lots of other people in and around the area for several

54:59

days before it chose a school to land.

55:02

It's so compelling because the children are all clearly, they're not actors.

55:07

So as they're adults later, they're all talking about this moment.

55:12

And it's like they had a religious experience together.

55:15

Like they're all sharing it and talking about it.

55:17

And you could tell it's like it's a deeply moving experience.

55:20

If they were actors, they wouldn't have been able to do such a good job.

55:25

Because to convey the reality of that moment to them, to be able to have this

55:32

interpretation of this event where they're all consistent in the story and they're

55:38

all clearly still shook by this moment.

55:42

It's really interesting because if you had that scene in a movie, it would take

55:47

like a really good actor to pull it off.

55:49

And they'd probably need multiple takes.

55:51

They'd probably want to get the best one.

55:53

But those kids, the way they were talking about it and the way they were

55:55

drawing it, you're like, wow, it really does seem like something happened to

55:59

them.

55:59

I know how credible the testimony of the children is because my partner,

56:04

Rebecca, she's never had much of an interest in what I do, making documentaries

56:09

on UFOs.

56:09

I do other things as well.

56:10

But when I was reviewing in the studio the archival interview of the children,

56:15

she just dropped off a cup of coffee and she stopped and went, oh, my God.

56:21

Those children are not lying.

56:23

This is the most amazing thing I've ever seen.

56:24

Because, look, I ask your audience to don't take it from me.

56:29

Just suspend judgment for a moment and imagine, hypothetically, if a UFO or

56:36

several UFOs landed at a school in broad daylight in Rua, Zimbabwe, Africa, and

56:43

interacted telepathically with nearly 100 school children.

56:48

Not all of them had telepathic, but seeing the incident.

56:51

How significant of a story would you give that?

56:54

Well, not only that, they had the same message.

56:56

Yes.

56:56

But the telepathic message was that technology is a real problem.

57:01

Yes.

57:01

And there's things that people are doing with technology that are going to ruin

57:04

the earth.

57:04

Yes.

57:05

And they were trying to relay this to children, which is very strange.

57:08

Yes.

57:09

You know, I mean, maybe they just thought they were adults because they were

57:13

the same size as the aliens.

57:14

I mean, do you think they knew that they were children?

57:16

Do you think they understood that it was a school?

57:18

I mean, this is all speculation, right?

57:19

But no, I definitely had to ask myself, look, during the production of the film,

57:23

Paula Harris actually turned me on to another landing case that happened in

57:27

Australia in 1966 at a school.

57:30

And this time, there were roughly 300 witnesses that saw a disc land right

57:36

outside a playground in Australia.

57:39

And we went to Australia and investigated that case, went to the landing site,

57:42

talked to eyewitness testimony, people that jumped the fence at the school

57:46

playground and ran over to where this thing landed.

57:48

And then we even interviewed a guy who snapped a photograph of a disc, a Polaroid,

57:53

back in 1966, two days prior to the incident.

57:56

So it's very probably that we have photographic evidence, we have eyewitness

58:02

testimony, and for the first time we've got testimony from a science teacher.

58:07

So why do these things land at schools?

58:12

It seems like, and I'm just totally speculating here, but it seems like if I

58:16

were going to do that, it seems like a pretty benign environment.

58:21

We've got testimony from military guys that we take a fairly hostile position

58:25

towards things that penetrate sensitive military installations.

58:29

And, you know, so maybe, I'm just saying maybe, maybe it's safe.

58:36

Maybe it's safe.

58:37

Yeah, but we have to stop reacting to, you know, intrusions by UFOs as a threat.

58:44

I mean, that's the whole thing behind this new task force.

58:47

And as much as I respect, you know, the task force, my colleagues and I want to

58:52

cooperate with them to the extent that we can bring information or resources to

58:58

what they do.

59:00

But there is more.

59:01

This is not, should not be looked at specifically as a threat.

59:06

I mean, with the phenomena that we observe, I mean, if they wanted to blow up

59:11

those F-18s, they could do it.

59:13

Okay.

59:13

Obviously, that's not what it's all about.

59:18

And this idea of just labeling it all as a threat because it's unknown, that's

59:24

a wrong idea.

59:26

Ninety percent of the information comes from the public, comes from children,

59:31

comes, and very, very little of it is made up.

59:34

You know, in France, I mean, the data we get, you know, at the French Space

59:39

Agency comes through channels where if people reported something that's found

59:45

to be untrue, they are going to be called by the police.

59:49

And, you know, they may have some penalties associated with that.

59:54

Now, you said that they can blow them up, but there's never been any evidence

59:57

of a UFO attacking anything, right?

59:59

Like the thing that…

1:00:01

There has been.

1:00:01

Really?

1:00:02

Yes.

1:00:03

There have been people killed, apparently for no reason.

1:00:08

Very rare, though.

1:00:10

Where was this?

1:00:11

10, 12 cases.

1:00:12

You know, I spent, I went to Brazil four times, and I got to know Brazil and

1:00:18

the data there pretty well.

1:00:21

And I spoke to people in the armed forces, people in the Brazilian Air Force,

1:00:27

and the police.

1:00:30

There have been a number of cases where people died, where witnesses died, and

1:00:36

also cases where witnesses were chased through the jungle by objects with beams.

1:00:43

And I was really interested in those beams because those beams were extensible.

1:00:49

Well, it's hard to make an extensible – if you turn on the light or a laser,

1:00:54

you know, it's going to keep going.

1:00:57

It doesn't go 10 feet and just stop in mid-air.

1:01:01

Those beams stop, which means it's not just light.

1:01:05

It's something else.

1:01:06

And also, they will pin you to, you know, a hammock, for example, or some of

1:01:12

the people who are asleep, you know, a hammock.

1:01:15

They wake up and they see this light, and the light comes down and pins them to

1:01:21

the bed or to the hammock.

1:01:24

And it – I've published pictures of injuries that people sustained as a

1:01:30

result of those beams.

1:01:32

So, you know, this is at least a demonstration of, you know, of a power that,

1:01:40

number one, we don't quite understand the technology.

1:01:44

And, number two, we don't understand why that is.

1:01:48

And you're of the opinion that these things might not be from another planet,

1:01:53

that they could be – they're interdimensional.

1:01:56

So, yes, I'm amazed that – you know, I mean, in the 50s and 60s, there was

1:02:04

all that science fiction about, you know, aliens from other planets and so on,

1:02:09

all these movies.

1:02:11

So, that was – okay, and frankly, when I started looking at the statistics,

1:02:17

trying to make sense, trying to build those databases, do AI on top of it, I

1:02:23

was looking for, you know, ET extraterrestrials.

1:02:26

Now, we've got so much more data that contradicts that – things coming

1:02:32

through the wall of a bedroom, okay, as a light, and the light turns into

1:02:37

something else.

1:02:39

And it has information in it, or it has – or it turns into something physical.

1:02:44

You know, this is not – this is way off.

1:02:47

I mean, these are not just vehicles that come from somewhere else.

1:02:51

So, it could be –

1:02:52

So, there are a number of contradictions in there.

1:02:54

It could be there's a number of different non-related phenomena.

1:02:58

Well, you know, to some extent, I mean, we keep saying that the scientists are

1:03:03

skeptical and so on, but if you look at physics today, I mean, people will tell

1:03:08

you there's probably more than – there must be more than four dimensions, you

1:03:13

know, of space-time.

1:03:16

There must be, to explain, you know, atomic phenomena, to explain quantum

1:03:21

mechanics, to explain all those things.

1:03:24

There could very well be theories that are published in physics journals about

1:03:31

multiple universes, about universes interpenetrating each other, maybe channels

1:03:38

between those eight universes.

1:03:40

There could be, you know, there could be another universe with a room like this

1:03:45

five minutes ahead of us.

1:03:46

We would never see them.

1:03:48

We would never detect them.

1:03:50

There could be another Earth five minutes ahead of us in another universe.

1:03:57

And physics today authorizes us to think about those things.

1:04:04

Now, they think about those things not because of UFOs.

1:04:08

They consider it because it makes sense in the theories they have to build to

1:04:13

explain what they see in the lab, okay, in the particle labs, in the accelerators,

1:04:21

and detecting all these other layers of matter, of nature.

1:04:27

But it implies that this isn't just, you know, not only the other planet, but

1:04:33

this isn't the only universe.

1:04:35

I was going to say, Jacques, one of the assets that Jacques brought to this

1:04:41

film, the phenomenon,

1:04:44

and he became involved through Lee Spiegel, and you could, you know, talk in a

1:04:49

minute about your reluctance to get involved.

1:04:51

Initially, Jacques was like, okay, well, I'll participate just this one little

1:04:54

section.

1:04:54

And eventually, I lured Jacques out to the studio, and we were editing the film

1:04:58

at the end of this dirt road in a very remote area.

1:05:01

We had a place that had no running water, no internet, no toilet.

1:05:05

Long story, I was going to get a better space, but I just couldn't find one,

1:05:08

and we just got so much work done in this space.

1:05:11

I decided to just edit the whole movie here.

1:05:13

There was a little cabin in the woods on the California coast.

1:05:18

It was gorgeous, full of flowers and so on, but no facilities.

1:05:22

None.

1:05:23

Just electricity some of the time.

1:05:25

Yeah.

1:05:25

And there were times when there wasn't even electricity.

1:05:29

Oh, yeah.

1:05:30

And Jacques would say, okay, I'm coming out for the weekend.

1:05:32

He would do these marathon edits with us.

1:05:34

And he'd say, I got my face paint.

1:05:35

I got my compass coming out.

1:05:37

And one of the first cases I think that you got involved with, speaking of

1:05:42

beans, was Socorro, New Mexico, that involved a police officer in April of 1964.

1:05:49

This is considered to be the most well-documented close encounter of the third

1:05:54

kind.

1:05:54

That's when the witness described seeing beans associated with the craft in U.S.

1:05:58

history.

1:05:59

Turns out, when Jacques found out that I'd already spent five years

1:06:03

investigating this case, I interviewed the wife, I interviewed his co-workers,

1:06:07

I interviewed his son, his daughter, and I went to the National Archives, and I

1:06:12

got all these new documents.

1:06:13

I revealed some of them in the movie.

1:06:15

Jacques said to me, and I showed him this stuff, he said, my gosh, I can't

1:06:19

believe you're doing this case.

1:06:21

He said, I was at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in April of 1964 with Dr. Hynek.

1:06:27

And you were telling Hynek, take it over, about these close encounters cases.

1:06:32

Well, about all the cases we had in France that I had in my computer catalog.

1:06:37

And that's when he wanted me to move to Northwestern, you know, from Texas.

1:06:44

My first year in this country was here in Austin, so it's always fun to come

1:06:49

back to Austin.

1:06:50

Austin has changed since 1962, I can tell you, I can testify to that.

1:06:56

Sure, it's changed since 99 when I first got here.

1:06:58

Yes.

1:06:59

And so I told Alan, you know, let me, you know, look really carefully at the

1:07:08

Air Force files, and you've got to have close encounter cases.

1:07:12

In those days, we were calling them landing cases because there were traces on

1:07:16

the ground, and that's where you could do some physics.

1:07:20

You know, there is more than a testimony.

1:07:22

The guy says, something landed in my backyard, it left these holes.

1:07:26

You don't have to believe him.

1:07:28

You can go see the holes.

1:07:30

You can measure them.

1:07:31

You can look at the temperature.

1:07:32

You can look at radiation.

1:07:33

You can look at all these things.

1:07:36

So, and he said, no, well, we don't, we don't have those kinds of cases.

1:07:40

So, I convinced him, you know, to let me look at the files.

1:07:45

And he said, look, I'm going to Wright-Patterson, you know, where Project Blue

1:07:50

Book was headquartered, at the Foreign Technology Division, which is an

1:07:57

intelligence branch of the Air Force.

1:08:01

It looks at foreign materials.

1:08:03

It was a logical place to put it.

1:08:05

And what's funny is everybody assumes that that project was top secret, you

1:08:09

know.

1:08:10

I mean, even in the, you know, the movie production, the series now, the top

1:08:15

secret Blue Book, Blue Book was never top secret.

1:08:18

There were a few cases individually that were secret because of that radar was

1:08:24

classified at the time.

1:08:26

But the observation itself wasn't classified.

1:08:30

And in those days, I wasn't, I didn't have a clearance.

1:08:34

And I wasn't even an American citizen.

1:08:38

I had only been in the U.S., you know, for a couple of years.

1:08:41

So, I, he said, that's no problem.

1:08:45

You know, we'll get you just a clearance for two days, you know, to go, to get

1:08:49

to the base.

1:08:50

But the archives themselves were, you know, any French scientist who wanted

1:08:55

access could have had access.

1:08:57

Any American scientist.

1:08:58

And they, what frustrated the Air Force was that, you know, Carl Sagan never

1:09:03

went there.

1:09:04

All these scientists who said that, who poo-pooed the whole idea of UFOs, they

1:09:10

never went to look at the archives.

1:09:13

They never looked at the testimonies, at the wires, at the teletypes, you know.

1:09:18

We talked about Carl Sagan last night.

1:09:20

And you felt that Carl Sagan was pressured by ridicule.

1:09:23

And that, because of some of the things that he had speculated that actually

1:09:26

turned out to be true,

1:09:27

like water on the moon, and possibly even some form of life that existed in the

1:09:31

past or currently on Mars.

1:09:33

Yes, he was willing to, they had interesting discussions between Heineck and Sagan.

1:09:41

Heineck, you know, was, kept talking about the Air Force files.

1:09:45

And Sagan said, you know, if we've got NORAD, NORAD looks at everything, with

1:09:54

radar covering the United States, you know, completely.

1:09:58

So if there are these things, NORAD must be detecting them.

1:10:02

So Heineck said, well, you know, go ask them.

1:10:06

So Sagan went to NORAD, and he went to, you know, a mountain where the

1:10:14

headquarters are, and the control system, Cheyenne Mountain.

1:10:19

And he explained that, you know, I understand you guys must have UFOs.

1:10:26

They said no.

1:10:27

And he said, but, you know, you're tracking everything.

1:10:30

We've got these people, you know.

1:10:32

Heineck tells me, he's got these reports about, and you know, you must have.

1:10:36

UFO reports.

1:10:37

You must be detecting something.

1:10:39

They said, yeah, but we don't call them UFOs.

1:10:43

So we have no UFOs.

1:10:46

It doesn't show up in the files.

1:10:47

Somebody says, keyword, UFO.

1:10:50

NORAD doesn't have anything.

1:10:52

So Carl Sagan said, what do you guys call them?

1:10:57

And we said, they said, we call them UCTs.

1:11:01

And he said, what's a UCT?

1:11:04

And he said, doctor, it's an uncorrelated target.

1:11:07

And he said, how many uncorrelated targets do you get a month?

1:11:13

They said about 10,000.

1:11:15

What does that mean, though?

1:11:19

Well, that means that, that's what they asked.

1:11:23

He said, look, we're here to look for incoming trajectories of ballistic

1:11:29

missiles from Russia.

1:11:31

So if there is one data point, system doesn't care.

1:11:35

If there are two data points, system starts looking.

1:11:39

If there is a third one, it computes a trajectory.

1:11:43

If the trajectory looks like an incoming thing, for example, from Alaska over

1:11:48

towards Montana,

1:11:51

we're going to alert, you know, the fighters.

1:11:53

Otherwise, it could be a flock of birds.

1:11:58

It could be a weather balloon.

1:12:00

It could be anything else, you know.

1:12:02

And we're not, we're not paid to track 10,000 other things.

1:12:06

You know, we're, we're here to defend the United States.

1:12:10

Well, so who is looking at the other 10,000?

1:12:13

Well, that's one of the things I was going to say is that you said earlier that

1:12:17

you felt that Project Blue Book was fairly transparent.

1:12:19

But one of the things that I uncovered when I was investigating this landing

1:12:23

case, which was a close encounter of the third kind,

1:12:25

witnessed by a police officer in Socorro, New Mexico, 1964, was that the

1:12:30

military was on scene within less than an hour.

1:12:33

It was Richard T. Holder from White Sands, Holloman Air Force Base area.

1:12:38

He documented the landing prints from the landing gear of the spaceship, the so-called

1:12:45

craft.

1:12:46

Documented with photographs?

1:12:47

Yeah, they took photographs.

1:12:48

Those photographs exist today?

1:12:49

Yeah, they're in the movie.

1:12:50

Yeah.

1:12:51

He, he documents the footprints that corresponded to exactly where the eyewitness

1:12:56

reported, the on-duty police officer,

1:12:59

where he saw these little childlike beings.

1:13:02

They documented all this, and yet they downplayed that aspect of the phenomenon,

1:13:07

of the encounter so much.

1:13:09

And I know that because they, Lonnie Zamora, the police officer, said he was

1:13:12

told not to talk about it.

1:13:13

Because it's one thing to explain away an unidentified craft.

1:13:17

It's another thing to have to explain away beings on the ground.

1:13:21

And how did they describe these beings?

1:13:23

He said they were small, childlike.

1:13:25

There's the Getty Images.

1:13:27

Yeah, so this, yeah, so that's, that's Officer Lonnie Zamora.

1:13:31

That's, they placed rocks around the landing gear imprints to preserve the

1:13:36

fresh ground traces.

1:13:37

And then there were four of them.

1:13:40

Those rocks are still here today.

1:13:41

Like, you know, from 1964 today, you'll still see those rocks.

1:13:46

They're more in the ground at this point.

1:13:48

But they documented, and I have the diagrams, the footprints of the creatures

1:13:53

as well.

1:13:53

So they knew it was a close encounter of the third kind.

1:13:55

How did they describe the creatures?

1:13:57

They were, there were these tiny little, they looked like children.

1:14:01

And they had white fitting suits on.

1:14:03

White fitting or tight fitting?

1:14:04

Tight fitting white suits.

1:14:06

Tight fitting white suits.

1:14:07

Tight fitting white suits.

1:14:07

And what, what I was going to say to you is-

1:14:09

What were their heads like?

1:14:10

There were big, bigger heads, but the description of the beans was that there

1:14:16

was only a couple

1:14:17

of newspaper articles that came out regarding the beans because the Air Force

1:14:21

wanted to really

1:14:22

downplay the fact that it was a close encounter of the third kind.

1:14:25

But that aspect of the encounter leaked out before the, before the military got

1:14:29

there to the

1:14:30

local newspapers, the officer Lonnie Zamora had cut out those articles

1:14:36

describing his description

1:14:37

of the beans, and he kept them in a black duffel bag, which I discovered at his

1:14:41

home.

1:14:42

And I feature those as well in the film.

1:14:44

But again, then you had congressional hearings two years later where you had

1:14:48

people at Project

1:14:49

Blue Book, Quintanilla, denying the fact that there was any substantial

1:14:52

evidence that

1:14:54

would prove we're not alone.

1:14:54

That was a lie.

1:14:56

And Quintanilla lied.

1:14:58

And Dr. Hynek towed the party line during his entire time.

1:15:02

But then afterwards, he left in 1969, the Air Force, and he founded CUFOS,

1:15:07

which basically

1:15:08

proves that he believed, he did a 180, and he believed that we were not alone.

1:15:12

Well, that was, he was waiting for a case like that.

1:15:16

You know, I kept telling him, I kept showing him reports from all over the

1:15:21

world, okay?

1:15:23

He still said, I can't, you know, I believe those reports, I believe we have

1:15:31

the same thing

1:15:32

in the U.S.

1:15:33

I convinced him of that.

1:15:34

But he was waiting for a case where he could convince Sagan and Menzel and, you

1:15:41

know, Dr.

1:15:42

Menzel at Harvard and his colleagues in science.

1:15:46

Because he knew those guys.

1:15:47

And they would believe Quintanilla rather than believing Hynek.

1:15:51

And, you know, the problem at Socorro was there was only one witness.

1:15:56

One witness that saw the beans, but there were a number of witnesses that saw

1:15:59

the craft.

1:16:00

Saw the craft, yes.

1:16:02

And there were theories that this was an experimental thing from white sands.

1:16:06

White sands is, you know, 30 minutes away.

1:16:09

And it's full of things.

1:16:11

And there was, the other explanation was it's a test for lunar landing, you

1:16:16

know, system and so on.

1:16:19

It doesn't look anything like the lunar lander.

1:16:22

And there was a lunar lander.

1:16:25

But it was in California.

1:16:26

It wasn't in New Mexico.

1:16:27

Egg-shaped craft, okay?

1:16:29

It was white.

1:16:30

I remember Fravor describing a Tic-Tac.

1:16:32

I was investigating.

1:16:33

When that story broke, I was still working on Socorro.

1:16:35

Socorro, he described as an egg.

1:16:37

I don't know.

1:16:38

Did we have Tic-Tacs back in 1964?

1:16:39

Maybe we did.

1:16:40

Pretty close.

1:16:41

But Tic-Tac egg.

1:16:42

The police officer described it.

1:16:44

Had no wings, no tail.

1:16:45

It had a blue flame.

1:16:47

But when it got to 20 feet off the ground, it went completely silent.

1:16:50

No exhaust vents.

1:16:51

No wings, no tail.

1:16:52

Had a little insignia on it, which we actually show in the film.

1:16:55

So this is supposedly...

1:16:57

That's a fake.

1:16:57

That's not the real symbol.

1:16:59

That's a fake symbol that was Richard T. Holder got to the site, told Lonnie to

1:17:05

put a different symbol because they could quickly identify a hoaxster if they

1:17:10

were able to.

1:17:11

We found the real symbol at the National Archives that was written in Dr. Hynek's

1:17:15

own handwriting, which I shared with you, which is an inverted V.

1:17:19

It's an A.

1:17:20

Two lines here and one line across the top.

1:17:22

It's an A.

1:17:23

It's featured in the movie, but that was a fake symbol.

1:17:26

So you put a fake symbol on it just to see if people were hoaxing it?

1:17:31

Well, what he did was he said to the witness...

1:17:34

Or they did, rather.

1:17:34

They did.

1:17:35

It was a good idea, actually.

1:17:36

He said, look, let's change the symbol.

1:17:39

That way, if there's anybody else claims to have seen this thing and they say,

1:17:42

yeah, that's the symbol, we'll be able to quickly identify a hoaxster.

1:17:44

Oh.

1:17:45

So that was the point behind that.

1:17:47

That's pretty clever.

1:17:47

Yeah, it's pretty clever.

1:17:48

Did these things, the beings, the way he described them, did they have the

1:17:53

archetypal alien appearance of very small bodies, large eyes?

1:17:57

Did they have all the characteristics that you're hearing from these other...

1:18:01

He described them as being small, childlike, and then I interviewed the wife.

1:18:06

Unfortunately, Lonnie had died before I got to him, but I got interviews with

1:18:09

him that were done earlier on radio.

1:18:10

But Lonnie's wife said, whatever my husband saw changed him forever.

1:18:17

He was never the same, and he went straight to the church right after it

1:18:21

happened.

1:18:22

I mean, the military was on the way to the scene when he was at the church

1:18:25

talking to the pastor about this incident.

1:18:28

But she said, it changed my husband.

1:18:29

He apparently got eye contact with one of the two beings that was standing at

1:18:33

the base of the craft.

1:18:34

He wouldn't talk to Hynek until he had gone to the church and spoken to him.

1:18:40

And it changed his life.

1:18:45

It changed Hynek.

1:18:46

I mean, at that point, Hynek came back and said, you know, you're right.

1:18:51

I mean, we have those things, and we have to take it into consideration.

1:18:57

So that's really the case he was waiting for to start looking at.

1:19:04

Then there was another landing case that happened in 66 in Michigan, so two

1:19:07

years after the landing case in Socorro.

1:19:09

And this one was witnessed by police officers and a whole bunch of people in a

1:19:12

college and reporters.

1:19:14

That was the infamous Michigan landing.

1:19:17

And Dr. Hynek had a huge press conference and explained it as swamp gas.

1:19:23

He later said it was one of his biggest regrets.

1:19:26

And then Congressman Gerald Ford, who became president of the United States,

1:19:31

was like so up in arms about this that he was screaming from the hilltops, you

1:19:35

know, how could you?

1:19:37

It was his constituents.

1:19:38

And they pushed for congressional hearings in the United States.

1:19:41

A lot of people don't know that.

1:19:41

He was up in arms in what way?

1:19:43

He said he was so angry at the Air Force for dismissing it as swamp gas that he

1:19:48

pushed for congressional hearings, which we had congressional hearings.

1:19:52

And here's the crazy part, and this is something we realized in the edit studio,

1:19:57

right at the end of the hearings, the congressional hearings in 1966 in

1:20:00

Washington, D.C., as they were departing the building from those hearings, a

1:20:05

flying saucer landed at a school in Australia on the other side of the world.

1:20:10

That was happening as they were walking out of the building.

1:20:12

It's crazy.

1:20:13

It was just one of those things that we were like, wait a minute, the time,

1:20:16

yeah, that was.

1:20:16

Does it appear that these things happen in clusters?

1:20:21

Yeah, and, you know, Socorro happened the day after Heineck and I left the Air

1:20:30

Force base in Dayton, okay, Wright-Patterson.

1:20:36

We were there for essentially three days, okay?

1:20:39

What were you doing there?

1:20:41

We spent a whole day in the vault, you know, looking at the files and so on.

1:20:44

And then after that, we flew back, you know, both of us flew back to Chicago.

1:20:51

Chicago, and next day, phone call from Quintanilla to Heineck, how soon can you

1:20:59

be in New Mexico?

1:21:01

And he said, why would I go to New Mexico?

1:21:04

He said, because something landed in Socorro, and you were there.

1:21:08

It landed when it happened just when we were leaving the Air Force base.

1:21:15

And I mean, there is nothing you can do about that.

1:21:18

I mean, those are coincidences, you know, information coincidences that just

1:21:23

happened.

1:21:24

I would love to take this opportunity to any of your audience out there.

1:21:27

I came across a memo when I was at the National Archives regarding Quintanilla

1:21:33

talking to Heineck.

1:21:34

And Quintanilla was very concerned about a film crew that arrived in Socorro,

1:21:40

New Mexico, shortly after the incident.

1:21:42

And they didn't really want him talking.

1:21:44

But he participated with the film crew.

1:21:46

And he even said to Heineck in this memo, he goes, it would be too obvious if I

1:21:50

show up there, but why don't you be passing through to Heineck in 1964, 65, and

1:21:54

just find out what the hell is going on.

1:21:57

Why is this police officer?

1:21:58

So we told him not to talk about it, participating with the film crew.

1:22:01

The film is called Phenomenon 7.7, and it was done by a guy named Michael Musto,

1:22:08

and I can't remember the other guys, but it's called Phenomenon 7.7, Empire

1:22:13

Studios.

1:22:13

I spent four years trying to find this film.

1:22:16

If anybody out there knows where they can get their hands on it, it's color

1:22:20

film, 16 millimeter of the entire, they interviewed Lonnie and all the people

1:22:24

around him in just months after that incident.

1:22:26

It's the best case in America.

1:22:28

Well, you found some incredible footage, like the U.N. testimony footage.

1:22:33

And I lived through that with him watching, you know, what James was doing to

1:22:39

try to, by any means, you know, get to the real, actual footage, and that's

1:22:45

incredible.

1:22:46

We spent, my sister Kelly Fox worked as an archivist for several years, digging

1:22:51

up never-before-seen archival footage.

1:22:54

And one of them, the very man, Lee Spiegel, who put on the 1978 United Nations

1:22:59

event with you and Hynek and Coyne and a handful of others, the footage has

1:23:04

never seen the light of day.

1:23:06

It's just gone.

1:23:07

And Gordon Cooper.

1:23:08

And Gordon Cooper.

1:23:09

And we found that, my sister found that footage, and it was one of the pinnacle

1:23:13

moments of production.

1:23:14

This footage that had been missing for 40 years, and it's in the movie.

1:23:18

And it's color, and it's clear.

1:23:20

Yes.

1:23:20

Sound is clear.

1:23:22

It's perfect.

1:23:22

And once we found it, it took a year to get our hands on it.

1:23:25

Remember all the stuff we had to go through?

1:23:27

Oh, my God.

1:23:28

Your audience's eyes would glaze over if I gave you the details.

1:23:30

What is it show, specifically?

1:23:32

There was a, well, you tell us about the event at United Nations.

1:23:35

It's amazing.

1:23:36

But this footage, what is this footage that you found show?

1:23:39

Oh, well, you're talking about the film?

1:23:42

Yeah.

1:23:44

It's a film crew that had a budget from Empire Studios in Los Angeles, traveled

1:23:49

to Socorro, New Mexico, shortly after the most phenomenon 7.7, Michael Musto,

1:23:55

Empire Film Studios.

1:23:57

I cannot find this film.

1:24:00

You have no idea how hard I found.

1:24:02

I went and found the guy's wife.

1:24:04

He's dead.

1:24:05

I befriended her.

1:24:07

I spent a year and a half getting to know her.

1:24:09

She finally let me into her husband's archives.

1:24:12

He had all these, like, storage facilities.

1:24:14

It's 110 degrees with no windows.

1:24:16

I'm inside there while she's bawling her eyes out because her husband had just

1:24:19

died.

1:24:20

And I'm digging through all of his stuff.

1:24:21

I looked through there.

1:24:22

I contacted the head of the studios.

1:24:24

I found out where Empire Studios got bought by other companies.

1:24:28

I literally spent the better part of five years.

1:24:30

I could not find this film.

1:24:32

But it's the best documentation of the best close encounter of the third kind

1:24:37

in U.S. history.

1:24:39

And it's all filmed in color.

1:24:42

One of the things we talked about last night at dinner is Betty and Barney Hill.

1:24:45

And I told you that Angela Hill, who's a top UFC fighter, is the granddaughter

1:24:53

of Barney Hill, which is crazy.

1:24:55

And she didn't tell me until after the podcast.

1:24:57

And I was like, what?

1:24:59

Like, I almost wanted to start our podcast back up again and have her just talk

1:25:03

about that.

1:25:04

I just wanted to talk about her mixed martial arts career.

1:25:08

And then that came up.

1:25:09

And I was like, I can't believe this is real.

1:25:11

Like, you're telling me something.

1:25:13

You're related to your grandfather was the most famous abduction story ever.

1:25:20

Him and his wife, Betty and Barney Hill, the most famous UFO abduction story

1:25:25

ever.

1:25:26

And that was in, what year was that?

1:25:28

In 1961?

1:25:29

Yeah.

1:25:30

September 1961 in New Hampshire.

1:25:34

Yeah.

1:25:35

And that is a story, again, that featured the same sort of iconic beings, right?

1:25:41

It was very similar.

1:25:42

Jacques, you were there with them.

1:25:44

You interviewed them.

1:25:45

Well, about a year or so later, they contacted me and Dr. Hynek saying that

1:25:57

Betty thought that

1:25:59

she was, she had some contact with, you know, the phenomenon that might

1:26:05

manifest.

1:26:07

It might happen again.

1:26:09

And she wanted to do sort of an experiment.

1:26:12

So they had some land close to a big lake where they had a little summer place.

1:26:20

And so Hynek couldn't go there and asked me to go there.

1:26:24

And Betty and Barney were there.

1:26:28

And Dr. Simon, who was the psychiatrist from Boston, who did the hypnosis of

1:26:37

both of them

1:26:38

separately and really broke the case, was, was with us.

1:26:43

And so we drew a big, you know, circle in the grass.

1:26:49

And I had a telescope, a little telescope with me.

1:26:54

I had a little table set up and spent the night there waiting for UFOs and

1:27:01

fighting mosquitoes

1:27:02

because, you know, the time of year in New England, you're going to get

1:27:06

mosquitoes.

1:27:07

We didn't get any aliens, but we had a lot of time to talk.

1:27:12

And the next day, spent the next day with Betty and Barney and went through the

1:27:17

whole thing.

1:27:18

We listened to the tapes again.

1:27:22

And, you know, the tapes are terrifying.

1:27:24

And there is no question.

1:27:27

I mean, people are coming now saying, well, maybe it was a test.

1:27:30

Maybe they were, you know, maybe there was a psychological experiment.

1:27:35

That's not true.

1:27:36

I think these people were, their story checks out completely from beginning to

1:27:42

end.

1:27:42

And I took Dr. Simon aside.

1:27:45

And, you know, there are lots of stories of people being regressed hypnotically

1:27:51

by whoever, you know.

1:27:52

But Dr. Simon was, you know, a psychiatrist during World War II for the Army.

1:28:00

And he was an expert in hypnosis.

1:28:03

And he was a licensed hypnotist.

1:28:06

He wasn't just some ufologist who decided to hypnotize people, which is very

1:28:11

harmful, by the way.

1:28:13

I don't know why people allow that to happen to them.

1:28:17

So I took him aside and I said, doctor, if I had been sitting there in their

1:28:25

car on the back seat.

1:28:27

And here is Barney driving and Betty next to him.

1:28:32

And they see that, would I have seen the car stop and all these little beings

1:28:38

and the UFO, you know, stopping them on the road and dragging them out?

1:28:44

And he said, I have no way of answering that.

1:28:49

I can tell you that by the hypnosis that my patients are telling the truth as

1:28:58

they experienced it.

1:29:01

I cannot tell you what we would have seen if you and I had been there.

1:29:06

I cannot make that jump.

1:29:08

And I've never forgotten that, you know.

1:29:12

I mean, there could be a type of experience that some phenomena induce that,

1:29:18

you know, just are not reproducible.

1:29:23

And that's, you know, that's the toughest type of testimony, you know.

1:29:29

And how do you make sense of it?

1:29:31

Even if you have physical data, you know, you, you know, the car did stop, you

1:29:37

know, that, you know, you still, I have never forgotten that, that dialogue

1:29:43

with him.

1:29:44

A little over a decade later, you have Travis Walton, Snowflake, Arizona.

1:29:49

Let's, before we go to that, though, I have a lot more questions.

1:29:52

Yeah.

1:29:52

So when you, when you say this, that if you were there, you might not have

1:29:57

experienced it.

1:29:59

Are you saying that like this, this could have been something that they only

1:30:03

experienced, that maybe even witnesses would not have seen?

1:30:07

That this could have been unique only to them, like they were chosen for this

1:30:11

experience, they were abducted.

1:30:13

And I've spoken to quite a few witnesses who said that their car stopped on the

1:30:20

road.

1:30:21

There's a case, you know, two years ago in France that I investigated.

1:30:26

Again, the witness didn't report it to the French authorities because, you know,

1:30:32

witnesses don't want to be laughed at.

1:30:35

Right.

1:30:35

So they, they think it's useless because the scientists are blocked.

1:30:39

They will never look at it.

1:30:40

So they, they just keep it to themselves.

1:30:42

But what, what happened is she was in a car with, with two teenage girls, one,

1:30:50

you know, her daughter and the daughter of, of another family.

1:30:54

And they were driving and they saw this thing.

1:30:57

And, and they, I, I asked her, did you, did you see any other cars?

1:31:04

And she said no.

1:31:06

And, well, this was an expressway in France in broad daylight.

1:31:11

There must have been other cars.

1:31:13

And that, that often happens, you know, they suddenly, all the sounds stop.

1:31:20

You know, the birds don't sing anymore.

1:31:22

There are no dogs barking.

1:31:24

You're in the countryside.

1:31:25

You know, everything, it's like there's a bubble around you and this thing

1:31:31

happens.

1:31:32

You have an experience and we know there were other cars on that expressway.

1:31:38

I mean, there's got to be.

1:31:39

And it's like, it's an isolated thing that's outside of, yeah, as if there was

1:31:47

another time and space.

1:31:50

So you're looking at perhaps a phenomenon that we will, we just don't have the

1:31:54

capability of understanding.

1:31:56

Well, but, you know, it's a goldmine for science.

1:32:00

I mean, this is why we need to get the academia, you know, involved.

1:32:05

We need to get the academy.

1:32:06

Right, but you're just dealing with anecdotal descriptions.

1:32:08

You can just look at the, you know, the fighter, you know, pilots and say, well,

1:32:14

it's a threat because it went around the fighter pilot.

1:32:17

You know.

1:32:17

How many experiences like this, though, are similar, where people have these

1:32:22

similar stories where out of nowhere.

1:32:24

Hundreds.

1:32:25

You can talk to any of the groups that gather that, that kind of data around

1:32:29

the world.

1:32:30

And it's similar in that everything stops.

1:32:32

Yes.

1:32:33

And so what, what this might.

1:32:36

It's one of the constants.

1:32:37

Really?

1:32:38

One of the constants.

1:32:39

So what this might be describing is some sort of an ability to control space

1:32:43

and time that we don't understand.

1:32:46

Or control.

1:32:47

Dimensions.

1:32:48

Consciousness.

1:32:49

Human consciousness.

1:32:50

Long enough to create an experience.

1:32:53

That's what, you know, Dr. John Mack, you know, I got to know him quite well.

1:32:59

I read his book many years ago.

1:33:02

Yeah.

1:33:03

Yeah.

1:33:04

Well, his book, Passport to the Cosmos is a, an homage to Passport to Magonia,

1:33:09

which was my book of many years ago.

1:33:11

We had those conversations.

1:33:13

Oh.

1:33:13

We had those conversations.

1:33:14

And his take on it was, he did a lot of hypnotic regression as a psychiatrist

1:33:20

with alien abductees.

1:33:23

The thing that was disturbing to me about the, it was actually recommended to

1:33:26

me by my friend Maura.

1:33:27

She read it.

1:33:28

She's like, you got to read this.

1:33:28

This is crazy.

1:33:29

These people, they're all having the same story.

1:33:32

And she, she might have even given me the book.

1:33:35

But when I read it, that was the thing that struck me, like how similar the

1:33:39

stories were.

1:33:40

They were, all of them had a pattern that you could follow.

1:33:45

And they didn't know each other.

1:33:47

They're from different parts of the world.

1:33:49

Yes.

1:33:52

And that's what I'm looking for.

1:33:54

I'm not looking for individual cases.

1:33:56

You know, I'm a computer science guy.

1:33:59

I try to look at patterns and things that will take you to the next level of

1:34:04

understanding.

1:34:06

And you take one case at a time.

1:34:08

What was John Mack's conclusion after all his years?

1:34:11

John changed.

1:34:13

I mean, initially, he was, you know, he got interested because there were all

1:34:18

these books about hypnosis and so on.

1:34:22

Done by amateurs, you know, people who are not trained in hypnosis.

1:34:26

And he started sort of retraining himself to do hypnosis.

1:34:31

He, I asked him if he had used hypnosis in his practice as a psychiatrist.

1:34:38

And he said no.

1:34:39

He said, you know, he had a course in hypnosis of one week, you know.

1:34:44

But he never really practiced it.

1:34:47

He relearned hypnosis with some of the ufologists who were hypnotizing people.

1:34:54

And then gradually found out that what they did was very shoddy and was really

1:34:59

completely unscientific.

1:35:02

I mean, there were some of those books.

1:35:03

They were planting the idea, you know.

1:35:06

James, tell me about the blue alien you saw yesterday at 2.35 p.m.

1:35:14

Yeah, and you don't, if you do hypnosis, you don't lead the witness, you don't

1:35:19

do that.

1:35:19

And so he got disgusted with that and redid it, started to redo it his way.

1:35:26

And unfortunately, that's when he, when he was killed.

1:35:29

What was his initial idea about what was going on?

1:35:33

He bought, initially he bought the idea that these are aliens from somewhere.

1:35:38

I mean, why not?

1:35:38

And that they are here to probe, you know, our consciousness, to understand

1:35:45

humans.

1:35:46

And then he gave up on that as he learned, as he did more and more interviews

1:35:53

and understood more the process and looked at the data.

1:35:59

And what did he decide it was after that, when he was giving up on the idea

1:36:03

that they were being probed?

1:36:03

I think he was on a whole new track of research.

1:36:08

But what was the line of that research?

1:36:12

I think he was, you know, he was coming to, maybe I influenced him a little bit,

1:36:19

but he was coming to my idea that we have to look at more than the extraterrestrials

1:36:28

that we see in the movies from the 50s, you know, from the 1950s, that this is

1:36:34

not it.

1:36:35

I mean, we need something more, more complex if we're going to get the

1:36:39

scientific community involved.

1:36:41

Meaning not just space travel from space as we know it.

1:36:46

It's not some super rocket that comes here.

1:36:48

Something interdimensional is more, more possible.

1:36:51

And they are not explorers coming here to pick up a few stones because, you

1:36:56

know, if they've been,

1:36:57

we have 200,000, you know, well-described cases.

1:37:04

So why would you come from, and we're exploring Mars, you know, now we're

1:37:10

sending a probe,

1:37:12

you know, we're sending a couple of probes to the moon, we're bringing back the

1:37:17

stones.

1:37:18

But we don't do that, you know, every Friday.

1:37:21

I mean, once you've done it, you've got it.

1:37:24

I mean, why would you keep doing it?

1:37:26

So what is your speculation?

1:37:28

What do you think is happening?

1:37:30

I don't see myself as, you know, the scientist who should speak on that because,

1:37:43

you know,

1:37:44

I know too much about the work of teams.

1:37:47

You know, I've worked with many teams in Silicon Valley.

1:37:52

I've financed a number of companies there in medicine, in space research, in

1:37:58

computing, of course.

1:38:00

The, it takes a team.

1:38:03

We need to get, what I can do is I can bring some of the history, like, you

1:38:10

know,

1:38:11

the Socorro thing where I try to help you in the movie.

1:38:15

But because I know the history, I've met many of these people.

1:38:19

I've met the researchers.

1:38:21

I know what they went through, you know, including the Air Force officers.

1:38:26

You know, I mean, they were under extraordinary pressure.

1:38:30

So I can bring that context.

1:38:31

And I can bring, I would know how to put the AI component on top of the files.

1:38:38

But when all the years of studying.

1:38:42

But then other people would have to work with it to come to a theory.

1:38:45

I understand that.

1:38:46

But about all the years of studying, surely you must have developed some sort

1:38:51

of an idea of what you think this is.

1:38:54

Well, what, I'm, I'm a student of that material.

1:39:01

There is some form of consciousness out there that's teaching us something.

1:39:10

You can, I could show you.

1:39:12

Teaching us something.

1:39:13

Yeah.

1:39:13

They are teaching us something.

1:39:15

Like, you know what you have in the movie with those kids.

1:39:18

I mean, that's what the kids are saying.

1:39:20

I asked Jacques this exact question.

1:39:23

I remember where I was when I did it.

1:39:25

It was in a cafe in Silicon Valley.

1:39:28

I was with Dr. Peter Sturck regarding some metal stuff.

1:39:31

And I looked at you and I said, Jacques, you know, God, can you please tell me

1:39:37

what's going on?

1:39:39

And you said, regarding government secrecy, there's two points, and I'll get to

1:39:42

yours in a quick second.

1:39:43

And correct me if I'm wrong here, but you said to me, James, look at the

1:39:47

government secrecy this way.

1:39:49

It's not so much a question of what they know.

1:39:53

It's more of a question of what the government doesn't know.

1:39:57

They can reveal that we have structured craft of unknown origin that exhibit

1:40:04

flight characteristics that are light years advanced from anything we have.

1:40:08

They have no wings, no tail, no visible means of propulsion.

1:40:11

They can go from a standstill to out of sight in the blink of an eye.

1:40:14

There are some reports they can travel underwater at hypersonic speeds.

1:40:18

They go into space.

1:40:20

We don't know who they are, where they come from, or what they want.

1:40:24

There's no governing body that wants to disclose that nature of reality,

1:40:28

because suddenly, and I'm not saying it's a threat, because clearly if it was,

1:40:32

we'd know about it.

1:40:33

That, you know, we can't, these fly rings are on our fastest jets.

1:40:37

We can't disclose that kind of information.

1:40:39

And the other thing you said to me, and correct me if I'm wrong again, because

1:40:42

this is what you're getting at, what's the bigger picture?

1:40:45

What's going on?

1:40:46

And you said, think of it this way, James, is an omnipresent intelligence, okay?

1:40:54

That has the ability to manifest itself in a multitude of ways.

1:40:59

It's nuts and bolts, but it's also psychic.

1:41:02

That Fravor talked about that that object went to his cap point.

1:41:07

I mean, he said it made the hair on the back of his neck stand up straight,

1:41:10

because those coordinates weren't known.

1:41:11

Explain what you're saying to people, so this is a standalone podcast, so they

1:41:15

know what you're talking about.

1:41:16

I'm so sorry.

1:41:17

Yeah, so David Fravor, who's the Navy pilot that had that dramatic encounter

1:41:21

with a Tic Tac off the coast of San Diego back in 2004,

1:41:25

that was also documented with the radar and visual confirmation, but also

1:41:30

filmed on another subsequent flight just moments afterwards.

1:41:35

But he said that this object, first of all, reacted to him when he was flying

1:41:39

down to intercept it,

1:41:41

but then after it flew rings around him, and he said it made a joke out of the

1:41:45

fastest plane that the Navy had at the time,

1:41:47

it went to their cap point, which is the predetermined Latin longitude

1:41:51

strategic point of the military exercise.

1:41:54

So how on earth, he said, how on earth could this object know where that point

1:41:59

was?

1:41:59

So what I'm saying is there's a psychic, it's a nuts and bolts phenomenon, but

1:42:03

it's also psychic.

1:42:04

Is what I'm saying a fairly accurate assessment of what's going on?

1:42:08

Absolutely.

1:42:09

What gives you the impression that they're teaching us something?

1:42:16

Well, that, you know, I could give you a couple of, you know, quick reactions.

1:42:25

I mean, they are appearing to children, you know, those children are going to

1:42:29

grow up,

1:42:30

and they will remember what they've seen and so on.

1:42:33

But there is another, there is an analytical answer that, you know,

1:42:40

one of the things I did when I had good databases, filtering out,

1:42:45

I mean, I think we all agree that 90% of the cases are not true UFOs, okay?

1:42:52

So, you know, there are things, the moon seen through a layer of clouds.

1:42:57

Ball lightning.

1:42:58

Ball lightning, whatever.

1:42:59

All the things that the scientists say.

1:43:01

Yeah, that's true.

1:43:02

90% of it should be removed.

1:43:05

Very, very few hoaxes, by the way.

1:43:08

Very, very few.

1:43:10

Because if you're going to come up with a hoax,

1:43:12

you're going to come up with something better.

1:43:14

You know, something better than that.

1:43:15

That, you know, you can reveal and you can laugh and so on.

1:43:19

This is not it, you know.

1:43:21

You don't hoax about something that's that terrifying that people can check.

1:43:29

I started looking at patterns the way you look at patterns in science.

1:43:34

In other words, you take, you know, you do regressions, you do that.

1:43:38

The phenomenon is not constant.

1:43:41

It goes through waves two months or three months over a country like France or

1:43:48

over Florida or over, you know, Japan.

1:43:51

And it's very intense.

1:43:54

And after about two or three months, they go somewhere else or they disappear.

1:43:59

So you have this structure.

1:44:02

And I started looking at the structure to see if it correlated with anything we

1:44:07

know.

1:44:08

So I started looking at does it correlate with Mars, you know.

1:44:12

Mars right now is in the sky because it's close to us, okay.

1:44:16

It's a conjunction, you know, of Mars.

1:44:21

And maybe when Mars is closest to us, you know, we can, you know, it's easier

1:44:27

for them to come here or something.

1:44:31

There is something that happens that facilitates.

1:44:34

That broke down, okay.

1:44:38

That correlation didn't quite work.

1:44:40

And it looked like, but it looked like it was almost correlated but not quite.

1:44:46

And there is something in psychology called a schedule of reinforcement.

1:44:52

If you want to teach, say, a chimp to do something, to, for example, pick up a

1:44:59

ball or something,

1:45:01

every time he picks up the ball, you give him some food, okay.

1:45:05

So you reward every good action.

1:45:08

Works with kids, too.

1:45:10

I mean, works really well with human beings.

1:45:12

That's why we have advertising.

1:45:16

But you reinforce the action that you want to encourage.

1:45:21

Except that if you reinforce every instance where the chimp picks up the ball,

1:45:27

after a while, he goes play with something else, okay.

1:45:31

And he forgets the experiment.

1:45:33

If you want to induce a behavior that will stay there forever, that will never

1:45:42

be forgotten,

1:45:43

you have to have some randomness.

1:45:46

In other words, you don't always reinforce the same thing.

1:45:50

And sometimes he picks up the ball, fine, and he doesn't get the food.

1:45:55

And, you know, you make it random, and that, you know, that the psychologist

1:46:05

who did those experiments was Skinner.

1:46:09

Dr. Skinner published all these experiments, and that became gospel for the

1:46:14

psychologist.

1:46:16

A lot of psychological experiments ran that way of reinforcement of behavior

1:46:22

and behavior control.

1:46:24

And that got applied to a lot of different fields.

1:46:29

Well, that's what the schedule of UFO cases, if you look around the world, not

1:46:38

that just one country, not just that Air Force pilots or the Navy or something.

1:46:43

You have to look at the whole thing if you want to see that pattern.

1:46:47

The pattern is a worldwide reinforcement of behavior.

1:46:53

The behavior seems to be you need to let go of some of the things you're doing,

1:47:01

and you need to let go of technology that's harmful.

1:47:06

And you need, maybe, to be prepared to go into space.

1:47:10

I mean, that's my interpretation.

1:47:13

Where are you getting this interpretation?

1:47:15

From what aspect of these experiences has given you that interpretation?

1:47:19

The places where that reinforcement has taken place, and the appearance of the

1:47:26

phenomenon, because the phenomenon is just at the border of what we can

1:47:32

recognize.

1:47:32

It's a little bit weird, but they are basically humanoids.

1:47:37

I mean, they are not monsters with tentacles and so on.

1:47:42

They are humanoid, and the people like, you know, Lani, Lani Zamora, and they

1:47:49

think that there is communication, that they can look at the eyes of that

1:47:56

creature, and they get something.

1:48:00

You know, they get that reinforcement.

1:48:02

I want to say something about the Africa case, because I was in China a couple

1:48:07

times doing filming for the phenomenon,

1:48:11

and I learned of this landing case.

1:48:14

It's known in China as Meng Xiaogua, and I didn't prep any of the Chinese

1:48:19

people that I was hanging out with about what I'd filmed already in Africa,

1:48:24

the landing case and the telepathic message that these beings allegedly gave

1:48:28

the children,

1:48:29

and I got this interpreter was telling me what this landing case in Africa,

1:48:34

1994, same year in China as in Africa,

1:48:39

and this guy Meng Xiaogua got the same environmental message in China that the

1:48:42

children got, and I got goosebumps.

1:48:44

I'm sitting there going, you've got to be kidding me, and here's another crazy

1:48:47

part, that one of those wow moments in the film,

1:48:51

I was in Africa meeting with Judy Bates, who's now the head mistress, and she

1:48:55

said, well, come into my studio.

1:48:56

I'm going to show you some drawings.

1:48:57

I keep them in a very special place of what the kids saw that day, and she's

1:49:01

taking these drawings out of these beans,

1:49:03

and, you know, the quintessential big black eyes and big head, and even at one

1:49:09

point it had these two,

1:49:11

indicating these two little apostrophes that would indicate some sort of brain

1:49:15

telepathic wave going out from the head,

1:49:17

and fascinating, I took photographs of my iPhone.

1:49:20

About two months later, I was in Australia doing the landing case in 1966,

1:49:24

and I came across these cave paintings that I was learning about from locals,

1:49:28

from the Wangina,

1:49:29

and I saw these drawings that were thousands of years old of the exact same

1:49:35

beans that I just saw in Africa,

1:49:38

and I literally had the hair on the back of my neck, and I'm going, wow, this

1:49:42

is the Wangina,

1:49:42

they were driving these, they were drawing these cave, how could...

1:49:46

What is the name of these photos?

1:49:47

Wangina.

1:49:48

Wangina.

1:49:49

Yeah, I'm not sure exactly, but it's Australia Cave Paintings, or cave art.

1:49:54

You've seen the Wangina.

1:49:55

You did the book on...

1:49:58

No, ancient date.

1:50:00

Has there been a cataloging of various crafts and various beings,

1:50:05

and how many versions of them are there?

1:50:08

Like, how many versions of crafts have been seen?

1:50:10

I know there's a square that appears inside of a circle.

1:50:13

There's the ones that look like...

1:50:16

Yeah, the triangles.

1:50:17

There's the ones that look like the Tic Tac.

1:50:18

There's the discs.

1:50:20

There's a cigar.

1:50:22

Cigar, right.

1:50:23

I've got video footage of one of those that a guy took and sent to me.

1:50:26

Really impressive.

1:50:27

You have it here?

1:50:28

Salida, Colorado, 1995.

1:50:31

Tim Edwards, he can look it up.

1:50:33

You'll see it.

1:50:34

It's available somewhere?

1:50:35

Yeah.

1:50:35

So these are the...

1:50:36

Wangina.

1:50:36

Yeah.

1:50:37

What the fuck?

1:50:38

See?

1:50:38

Look at that one down at the bottom there.

1:50:40

Look at those.

1:50:42

I mean...

1:50:43

You said these are from Australia?

1:50:44

Yeah, those are from Australia.

1:50:45

Yeah.

1:50:46

Real similar.

1:50:47

And I literally saw the drawings.

1:50:49

And there's one in particular that was just really gave me goosebumps.

1:50:52

And I don't know exactly where it is, but it had the face and it had these two

1:50:57

kind of apostrophes indicating some sort of communication telepathic.

1:51:03

Just crazy.

1:51:04

I mean, that's what the children had drawn.

1:51:06

Look at those eyes.

1:51:06

Those were thousands of years old.

1:51:08

Thousands of years old.

1:51:10

It's very strange.

1:51:10

Isn't it crazy?

1:51:11

There's also this thought that human beings will one day be something different,

1:51:16

right?

1:51:17

We used to be some sort of an ancient hominid.

1:51:19

Now we're this.

1:51:20

And if you extrapolate, if you go from what we used to be, we're hairy and

1:51:25

muscular and, you know, very ape-like to what we are now, which is softer.

1:51:30

If our heads are larger, we're far more intelligent, if it just keeps going in

1:51:35

that direction, and if we keep with our integration with technology and

1:51:39

electronics, like that we might be something very different in the future, and

1:51:44

it's probably going to look like an iconic alien.

1:51:46

There's a lot of speculation that what we're looking at is us in the future,

1:51:51

and that these things are what we are going to become, or what we are if there

1:51:55

are multiple timelines that are running simultaneously in different dimensions.

1:52:00

That these things are what a human being becomes in these other timelines a

1:52:04

million years from now, a hundred thousand years from now, whatever it is.

1:52:09

You know, you guys were talking earlier about the time freezes during

1:52:12

encounters.

1:52:12

This is a little side story I want to tell you about.

1:52:15

When I brought the children together in Africa as adults, they had time to

1:52:19

process their encounter, and, you know, they were adults.

1:52:23

They could articulate better.

1:52:24

They'd had 20 years to think about it.

1:52:26

And they said, I said, put me there.

1:52:29

I just, I want to be there.

1:52:30

It's such an exciting moment to hear from people who got within three feet of a

1:52:34

potential being of another world.

1:52:35

And they said, well, if you've ever been out in the remote wilderness, and you

1:52:42

come across, and you have a rare sighting of a wild animal, there's this moment

1:52:47

of intrigue and curiosity, almost like time stops.

1:52:50

And what you're looking at is just as curious and intrigued about you as you

1:52:55

are of them.

1:52:57

And they said, that's what it was like with these beings, that they were

1:53:01

literally standing there, and the beings were looking at all the children.

1:53:04

Their eyes were scanning, just moving.

1:53:06

And there was this moment of curiosity.

1:53:08

They did not feel threatened.

1:53:09

It was a benign encounter.

1:53:12

But time had stopped, and it was just mystery, intrigue, curiosity.

1:53:17

So, with some of my colleagues, we decided to go back to, you know, and reinvestigate

1:53:26

some of the primary cases.

1:53:30

Because there is something missing in all this, you know, we're missing some

1:53:35

clues.

1:53:35

And so, we are about to publish a book called The Best Kept Secret, because

1:53:45

some of it, some of what we've uncovered was kept secret.

1:53:50

And it's still secret, even from, you know, the ufologists who've really

1:53:55

researched all that stuff.

1:53:57

It's going to be published, you know, early next year.

1:54:01

But we are pre, you know, people can pre-order it on Amazon.

1:54:08

It's called The Best Kept Secret.

1:54:10

And what we've done is to go back to some of the key cases and some new cases

1:54:19

where we found that there may have been some superficial information about it,

1:54:26

but most of the information was kept hidden by the witnesses.

1:54:32

Now, you know, we keep talking about cover-up, cover-up by the government,

1:54:36

which is true.

1:54:37

But the witnesses are not stupid.

1:54:41

They don't want to be, you know, laughed at by scientists on, you know, six o'clock

1:54:47

news.

1:54:48

So, they may give you some report because they think it's their duty to report

1:54:54

something to the police or the air force and so on.

1:54:58

But they won't tell you the whole story.

1:55:02

And if you want to know the whole story, you've got to go there, which may take

1:55:07

a couple of days.

1:55:09

You've done that.

1:55:09

And you've got to, you know, gain their trust and sit in the kitchen.

1:55:15

And if you're lucky, they give you a cup of coffee and you talk.

1:55:19

And you talk to their kids and you talk to, you know, and you get to know them.

1:55:25

And they get to know you.

1:55:26

And if you're genuine, if they can see that you're not playing any games, you

1:55:31

will eventually get the whole story.

1:55:34

And we've been doing that.

1:55:35

And that's what the book is about.

1:55:38

And it's going to change history.

1:55:41

It's going to change the history of the phenomenon.

1:55:45

Also, it builds on the human element, the human element.

1:55:49

But how is it going to change history?

1:55:52

How is it going to change it?

1:55:54

That number one, the structure of the information is amazing, the real

1:56:00

structure, not just what the police blotter or the, you know, air force teletype.

1:56:09

It's not necessarily about the object.

1:56:13

It's not necessarily about, you know, what somebody heard.

1:56:17

You've got to look at, and we found especially one case that's extraordinary.

1:56:25

The people had never, had never talked.

1:56:30

And it came to us.

1:56:33

And we've been studying it carefully from every angle.

1:56:38

And then we've been looking for patterns around that case.

1:56:42

That, again, that's the best kept secret.

1:56:46

People can pre-order it.

1:56:48

Right, but what is it about the structure?

1:56:51

Like, what is so astonishing about the structure of the information that you're

1:56:56

getting from these accounts?

1:56:58

I mean, you have to read the book, okay?

1:57:04

Well, people will read the book.

1:57:06

But what you would find was a commonality of, the structure has to do with the

1:57:13

intrusion in the life of someone.

1:57:17

This is not something that, oh, by the way, I saw a flying saucer yesterday,

1:57:22

you know, and now I'm going about my business.

1:57:25

How profound the information goes inside the consciousness.

1:57:30

Even those pilots are changed, you know, they are changed permanently.

1:57:35

Yeah.

1:57:35

You know, and the information, the thing stays with them.

1:57:41

And you can talk to the witness 40 years later, which we've done.

1:57:46

And it brings back as, I mean, their memory is completely clear.

1:57:51

You know, they know exactly where they were, what they were doing.

1:57:54

Well, because it's such a profound experience, right?

1:57:58

Yes.

1:57:58

But what about the structure of the information that's so astonishing that's

1:58:01

going to change history?

1:58:02

The, both the materials, and we continue to look at the, you have to look at

1:58:12

the materials at that, at that level.

1:58:16

Not simply that, oh, goody, you know, we can take it to the lab and we'll

1:58:21

analyze it and we'll patent it and, you know, we'll sell it as a new weapon.

1:58:25

No, it's a new, which is sort of, you know, the stupid way of looking at this.

1:58:30

These materials are earth materials, okay, in most cases.

1:58:39

We're looking at where the complexity is and where, why they were there at that

1:58:45

particular time, okay?

1:58:47

That's certainly one aspect of it.

1:58:50

The, we don't understand why these materials would be associated with an

1:58:56

instrument or a vehicle that does what those things do.

1:59:02

The, the situation also is structured in, in such a way that it, it ties into

1:59:10

our culture.

1:59:11

And, you know, in most cases, there is no anthropologist, you know, with the

1:59:16

team that goes out there, whether it's a military or scientists or ufologists,

1:59:22

they don't bring in an anthropologist.

1:59:26

When you, when you, when you look at the, at the traditions, the local

1:59:31

traditions, when you look, you can begin to tie the details of the sightings to

1:59:36

what would be in the conscious, I, I saw that in Brazil.

1:59:41

I mean, in, in, in Brazil, you can't just go there and ask people, you know, to

1:59:47

fill out a questionnaire, you know, about how many degrees to the left of the

1:59:52

North Pole was it, you know.

1:59:55

It, it, it doesn't work that way.

1:59:57

You have to get into the culture.

1:59:59

The phenomenon works on the culture at a very deep level.

2:00:04

I think that's what we're showing.

2:00:06

So there.

2:00:07

We've taken apart that mechanism.

2:00:08

These beings are having these interactions with people.

2:00:12

They're teaching these people something.

2:00:14

And that this is becoming more and more prevalent.

2:00:18

And we're learning something from this experience.

2:00:22

And the more you have stories like the 2017 story in the New York Times, the

2:00:26

more this comes.

2:00:27

It's almost like a slow trickle effect of getting the information out.

2:00:32

And, and changing, changing our behavior.

2:00:36

Do you think it's preparing people for more frequent or more prominent visits?

2:00:43

I, I don't, I can't, I can't answer that.

2:00:50

Well, one of the things that I'm very optimistic about is that we're living in

2:00:55

extremely divided times right now.

2:00:57

And this is a story that transcends politics, transcends religion and borders.

2:01:06

Whether people believe it or not, they're curious.

2:01:08

And I think ultimately when this story is starting to come out and there are

2:01:12

people behind the scenes working diligently to get it to come out, that it's

2:01:16

going to have a very unifying effect on humanity.

2:01:20

I mean, I sound like I'm, you know, group hug mom here.

2:01:23

But I actually do believe that it'll force us to look at ourselves as who we

2:01:27

really are.

2:01:28

One race, one planet.

2:01:30

And, and that there seems to be this external consciousness that is affecting

2:01:35

our evolution somehow.

2:01:37

And a planet that's extraordinarily fragile, you know, I mean, it could be

2:01:44

impacted literally, physically by a lot of things and, and impacted by our

2:01:50

stupidity.

2:01:51

I mean, there were three cases in history where the, the, you know, the alert

2:01:58

went to go bomb the Soviet Union.

2:02:01

I mean, three cases where the bombers were recalled because one guy thought

2:02:06

this doesn't make sense.

2:02:08

I mean, he had images in volume and he left the compound to go outside and, you

2:02:14

know, sort of readjust and, and realize that what he was looking at was a

2:02:19

simulation of a Russian attack and that the, the bombers were up and ready to

2:02:24

open the envelope.

2:02:25

In other words, they mistook the phenomenon for a threat.

2:02:29

For, for, for a threat, but everything in the defense establishment is oriented

2:02:36

towards a threat.

2:02:37

If you don't have a threat, you don't need all that.

2:02:40

That's the problem with the way you were describing the way we're approaching

2:02:44

this phenomenon, that we're approaching it like it's a threat.

2:02:47

Yes.

2:02:47

And that instead of the military looking at this, there should be the

2:02:52

scientific community that has access to this information.

2:02:57

The, the military has very, very good platforms for observation, you know, like

2:03:03

those infrared cameras, like the radar, like all the sophistication that they

2:03:08

have, the tracking systems, the satellites.

2:03:12

That's very useful, but, you know, I, I'd rather have a cup of coffee with the,

2:03:18

the guy in his trailer who has seen something and can show me the traces in his

2:03:23

backyard, you know, because I can, I can do something with that.

2:03:27

What, what I was going to say is, is, is, is, is, uh, you know, you look at

2:03:31

what they do, but you also look at what they don't do.

2:03:33

And, and, and one of the huge moments for me, and you could extrapolate on this,

2:03:38

is when I met with, with Senator Reed, he, uh, kind of accidentally drops this

2:03:43

huge bombshell where he talks about, uh, the most astonishing aspect of the

2:03:48

phenomenon.

2:03:48

As far as he, uh, determined from AATIP, that secret Pentagon program was that

2:03:54

they were not only observed over super sensitive military weapons installations,

2:03:59

but they were shutting our nukes off.

2:04:02

And Senator Reed went as far as to say, in a couple of cases that he looked

2:04:05

into, if the president of the United States wanted to launch, he couldn't have

2:04:09

launched.

2:04:09

And I interviewed, uh, one of these, uh, officers, um, Colonel Robert Salas,

2:04:15

who's a launch control officer.

2:04:17

And, uh, during the height of the cold war.

2:04:19

And he said, well, the message was pretty clear as far as I was concerned.

2:04:23

I said, well, what do you mean?

2:04:24

He goes, it's kind of like them taking matches out of the hands of a baby, you

2:04:27

know?

2:04:28

I mean, you know, it's, it's kind of interesting.

2:04:33

They give these messages to the children.

2:04:34

Look, I'm not saying that definitively one way or the other, this is exactly

2:04:37

what's going on, but I get messages to the children, landing cases with

2:04:41

children.

2:04:42

Then you get these benign encounters and then shutting our nukes off.

2:04:47

I don't know.

2:04:48

I mean, that's, that has to mean something, right?

2:04:51

Well, it's a powerful, it's a very, it's a powerful signal.

2:04:57

Is it a show of force or is it a show of, hey, you shouldn't be playing around

2:05:01

with these things or is it both?

2:05:03

You know, for a while, I mean, we're testing those facilities.

2:05:08

So for a while, when I was bringing that up, people would say, well, you know,

2:05:13

we've got incursions over those platforms to, uh, to, uh, see if the guards are

2:05:20

really, you know, reacting to detecting a threat and so on.

2:05:24

Again, the threat, but that's one thing to fly over a nuclear facility or a

2:05:30

storage area where you have nuclear bombs.

2:05:34

It's another to, you know, to, you know, overcome the code of the missiles one

2:05:40

by one, okay?

2:05:41

And you have cases in, in your movie where all the missiles, all the silos were

2:05:47

turned off one by one, you know?

2:05:50

And as you said, if they had wanted to launch, they couldn't have launched the

2:05:54

missiles.

2:05:56

That's not something that, you know, is just an exercise, you know, and

2:06:01

especially since the Russians had the same thing.

2:06:04

Yeah.

2:06:04

And, and, and this is something that the general public is always, because I'm

2:06:07

Joe public myself.

2:06:09

I mean, I'm a guy, a civilian that just wanted to get to the bottom of it.

2:06:12

I found, I sort of stumbled upon this thing accidentally, and now I can't walk

2:06:15

away from it because I'm going, this is like the biggest story of modern

2:06:18

history.

2:06:19

I think that every man, woman, and child is entitled to know this.

2:06:22

But I would always ask these generals every time I'd meet with these military

2:06:26

guys, and I've asked them all around the world, why are you guys covering this

2:06:31

up?

2:06:31

And they said, look, you can't look at it that way.

2:06:34

You have to understand from our perspective.

2:06:36

We are, we are employed by the public to protect you.

2:06:40

For us to disclose that we have these unidentified objects whizzing around in

2:06:46

our airspace with impunity, flying rings around our fastest jets, you know, we

2:06:51

don't know who they are, where they come from.

2:06:53

That's just not in our nature to disclose that to the public, you know.

2:06:56

That's going to open up the floodgate to a bunch of questions of which we don't

2:06:59

have answers.

2:06:59

So you can kind of justifiably so see why the secrecy has lasted as long as it

2:07:05

has.

2:07:05

But it's starting to come out now, and I think we're living in pretty exciting

2:07:10

times with it all.

2:07:11

I really do.

2:07:12

You know, I don't think I've ever mentioned this to you.

2:07:16

It's a little anecdote, but I had a friend who was one of the early researchers

2:07:20

in France,

2:07:21

an engineer named Amy Michel, was something of a philosopher, and he was compiling

2:07:28

all this data.

2:07:30

And he went to the Air Force and got, and the French Air Force was pretty open,

2:07:36

you know, with their cases.

2:07:40

And the man was Carlos Clairoin.

2:07:42

I remember his name.

2:07:44

This was from the mid-60s.

2:07:46

And they would have lunch, you know, which is a thing you do in France, you

2:07:50

know.

2:07:51

You have lunch with somebody, and then you talk.

2:07:53

And he convinced Clairoin that, you know, go to your superiors and find out,

2:08:02

you know, we should tell the public about this, and we should open it up, you

2:08:06

know.

2:08:07

We should tell them this is going on, okay.

2:08:10

And Clairoin said, well, you know, it's a good idea.

2:08:13

Let's have lunch again in one month.

2:08:16

You know, I'll tell you what I find out.

2:08:18

They get to the same restaurant a month later, and Amy Michel says, what did

2:08:24

you find out from your superiors?

2:08:28

Said, it turned out, I, my superiors told me to go to the Americans.

2:08:33

So I went to the U.S. Embassy in Paris, and I talked to my counterpart in the

2:08:39

military, and we're not going to open the fires.

2:08:45

And Amy Michel said, why not?

2:08:48

He said, well, the Americans think that there would be, it would open up too

2:08:55

many things, you know.

2:08:57

That we couldn't control, that society is not ready.

2:09:01

That people would be scared, people would panic, you know, that religious ideas

2:09:07

would float around, people would fight each other about, you know, what's

2:09:13

happening in their consciousness and in their faith and in their life.

2:09:19

And we couldn't control it.

2:09:23

And, you know, they told us to shut it up.

2:09:28

How long ago was this?

2:09:29

64, 63, 64.

2:09:33

So the time is ripe.

2:09:34

It's crazy that this has been going on for so long, and it's so remarkably

2:09:38

consistent.

2:09:39

You talk to people on the street, you know, they're not scared of this.

2:09:44

And the vast majority of people believe that the government knows a lot more

2:09:47

than what they're admitting to us.

2:09:48

Well, they're admitting they know a lot more than they ever admitted before.

2:09:51

They are.

2:09:52

Exactly.

2:09:52

And one of the things I really wanted to establish, if you'll notice, I have a

2:09:56

very dramatic encounter at the beginning of the film, which occurs in 1955.

2:10:00

It was with Colonel William T. Coleman, who later became public spokes officer

2:10:04

for Project Blue Book, which is the Air Force's investigatory arm for UFOs.

2:10:08

And you listen to his account of this encounter, this really dramatic encounter.

2:10:14

It started at duration of about nine minutes.

2:10:16

It started at 9,000 feet.

2:10:18

It ended at treetop level at what he called maximum continuous power in a B-25

2:10:22

bomber over Alabama in 1955.

2:10:25

And he describes, like, he had three engineers in the plane with him.

2:10:29

They're at treetop level flying flat out, and they literally thought they're

2:10:33

going to hit this disk.

2:10:34

And they're looking right at it in broad daylight going, where are the wings?

2:10:38

Where are the exhaust ports?

2:10:39

Where's the propulsion?

2:10:41

How on earth is this object flying?

2:10:43

And you listen to his description of it.

2:10:45

And then you fast forward, because we bookend it, to David Fravor off the coast

2:10:50

of San Diego.

2:10:52

And their description of the flight, the observed technology, it's identical to

2:10:57

what was documented in 1955.

2:10:59

So we're clearly dealing with a technology that's light years advanced.

2:11:05

It's the same description of witnesses back in the 40s and 50s.

2:11:08

It's what's happening exactly today.

2:11:10

So I just wanted to mention that, because a lot of people are like, oh, clearly

2:11:16

it's some technology that Skunk Works are working on.

2:11:19

I'm like, no, no, no, no, no.

2:11:20

This is the same stuff that's been going on in the 40s, and it's happening

2:11:23

today.

2:11:23

But we have to make sure that if there is, quote, disclosure, that it's not

2:11:30

just the next chapter of the cover-up.

2:11:34

Because there are things that haven't come out, you know, like Senator Reid

2:11:40

told you on your movie.

2:11:42

There are things that have not come out that should come out, that have been,

2:11:48

again, kept hidden, again, for fear that people would overreact or something.

2:11:54

Is there a concern?

2:11:56

Or simply things that they haven't told their own superiors.

2:11:59

Is there a concern that some of it would be disinformation, that they would

2:12:02

make up some sort of a story to try to cover things up?

2:12:07

Well, I don't know, but you could orient it to, you know, a message that would

2:12:15

be both interesting but reassuring superficially, and again, organize it around

2:12:24

the threat.

2:12:25

And, you know, again, that message of reacting to the threat, it makes sense

2:12:31

for the military, but the cases that they are working on are only 10% of the

2:12:38

database.

2:12:39

Should look at the other 90%.

2:12:41

You know, I interviewed this general, Parviz Jafari, he was an Iranian general,

2:12:48

had that dramatic UFO encounter over Tehran in 1976.

2:12:53

And at the time, I was more focused on the encounter itself and how

2:12:57

extraordinary it was.

2:12:58

And then Parviz Jafari, while piloting this F-4 Phantom jet, tries to shoot at

2:13:04

the UFO.

2:13:05

And he suddenly realizes, maybe that wasn't such a good idea.

2:13:09

And his controls freeze up on him.

2:13:11

And he has this really dramatic encounter where he talks about he was going to

2:13:15

eject the plane and, like, you know, why did I try shooting at this thing?

2:13:18

I mean, it knew he was about to shoot at it, according to him.

2:13:21

And 10 years after I interviewed Parviz Jafari, just looking for some sort of

2:13:25

additional material for the credit roll at the end,

2:13:28

I found this really powerful statement from Parviz.

2:13:32

And he goes, he was reflecting back on the incident.

2:13:35

And he said, my biggest regret was that I tried, instead of making peaceful

2:13:41

contact, instead of trying to make peaceful contact, I tried to shoot this

2:13:45

thing.

2:13:45

And I wish I could go back and have tried to make peaceful.

2:13:49

It's a really powerful statement coming from an Iranian general about an

2:13:53

incredibly dramatic encounter.

2:13:56

You know, just reflecting back on why is it that we have this stance of, hey,

2:14:01

anything that's unidentified in our airspace must be seen as a threat, and we

2:14:07

have to go after it and shoot at it.

2:14:10

I mean, that's not the kind of contact I'd like to…

2:14:12

I don't want that representing me, do you know?

2:14:15

Also, I don't think it would work very well.

2:14:17

No.

2:14:18

But there have been cases where they shot.

2:14:24

Where they shot what?

2:14:26

A UFO.

2:14:27

There's someone shot a UFO?

2:14:29

Yeah.

2:14:29

1952 over the White House.

2:14:32

I almost put this in the movie, and Jacques and I went back and forth on this

2:14:37

for a long time, and I'm so glad you brought this up.

2:14:40

Yeah, because I said to Jacques…

2:14:41

You had that fight.

2:14:42

Yeah, we kind of did.

2:14:43

Please, tell us the story, because it's amazing.

2:14:46

You were right to keep it at that level, because in the 80s, there were

2:14:54

congressional hearings, not about UFOs, but about something that I was doing

2:15:00

professionally,

2:15:01

which is building civilian computer networks for crisis management, for

2:15:07

industrial crisis management.

2:15:10

And we were funded, I mean, the company I created was funded to develop

2:15:16

essentially the, you know, the equivalent of computer conferencing we have

2:15:21

today on Facebook.

2:15:23

This was way before the web was invented, in the, again, the mid 80s, to link

2:15:30

together all the nuclear power plants in the major countries, five countries,

2:15:37

including Japan.

2:15:39

When it was against the Japanese law to have Japanese data outside Japan, and

2:15:48

to, for them to be on that network, the data had to be on our computer, which

2:15:53

was in, in California.

2:15:55

We operated that network for three years, and this was a closed network, it

2:16:00

wasn't accessible by people outside, it was just operated by the international,

2:16:07

you know, industry essentially, of atomic power.

2:16:13

And we, by the way, detected a number of flaws, and this was after the Three

2:16:19

Mile Island accident, you know, that was, could have done a lot of damage, and

2:16:25

people were scared, and they wanted to share the information,

2:16:29

and we were essentially the Facebook equivalent to that industry.

2:16:34

So I was asked to testify at the Al Gore hearings on emergency management.

2:16:42

And I and another little company were the only civilians there, or the only non-government

2:16:51

people there.

2:16:52

All the others were from, you know, the three later agencies, the CIA, the NRO,

2:16:59

the other agencies, or FEMA, you know, the Emergency Management Administration,

2:17:05

and so on.

2:17:06

And that was extraordinary, because those were the top people who would manage

2:17:14

an emergency, other than war.

2:17:16

I mean, they told us, you know, don't even go into the nuclear war thing,

2:17:21

because even in nuclear war, most of the damage is environmental damage, which

2:17:29

I didn't know.

2:17:30

It's the amount of dust that kills you.

2:17:33

It's not necessarily the bomb that kills you, it's what happens after the bomb.

2:17:39

So we were just looking at, you know, civilian casualties and civilian crises.

2:17:46

And there I met a number of people who were the people in the government who

2:17:54

would be handling, you know, nationwide or international crises,

2:18:00

like the Berlin crisis, the people who had been there in the days of the Berlin

2:18:04

crisis were there, and so on.

2:18:06

How do you structure the information to get all the people who need to know,

2:18:11

need to, I mean, everybody goes inside into a bunker,

2:18:14

and then the bankers communicate somehow, and then you get in touch with other

2:18:18

countries, you get their experts, and then you try to manage the situation.

2:18:23

Okay.

2:18:24

Like, you know, suppose a big meteorite falls.

2:18:27

Okay.

2:18:28

It's the size of half of Chicago.

2:18:30

You know, what do you do after that?

2:18:32

Okay.

2:18:33

And government needs to continue.

2:18:36

One of the people there was an expert who had worked under five administrations,

2:18:42

managing the structure of crisis management for the U.S. government.

2:18:47

He introduced me to Arthur Lundahl.

2:18:50

Arthur Lundahl was a legendary member of the intelligence community.

2:18:56

He was knighted by the Queen of England.

2:18:59

He's one of two or three Americans who were knighted.

2:19:02

And then his buddies at the CIA used to call him Sir Arthur of the light table,

2:19:09

because a lot of the things he did was with negatives, you know, with satellite

2:19:14

photographs that were on the light table.

2:19:17

He is the one who discovered the missiles in Cuba and briefed President Kennedy,

2:19:24

showed him where that was and why there were missiles and not just trees, you

2:19:32

know.

2:19:33

It takes a lot of training, it turns out.

2:19:35

You can just look at one of those pictures and say, ah, you know, that's a

2:19:39

missile.

2:19:40

He was the one who told, who was sent by the U.S. to brief Charles de Gaulle,

2:19:47

President de Gaulle,

2:19:49

about the U.S. shutdown over the Soviet Union.

2:19:53

And we became friends.

2:19:56

We became friends because I was introduced by the people from the Al Gore

2:20:02

hearings.

2:20:03

They knew what I was working on.

2:20:06

And he had been a pioneer within the intelligence community in getting all the,

2:20:12

you know.

2:20:13

He started the Air Force's Image Interpretation Center in Washington for the

2:20:22

Navy, the Air Force, CIA, and the other places.

2:20:27

He told me about 1952.

2:20:29

He was very interested in UFOs because he had seen photographs.

2:20:35

I mean, he was the Armed Forces Photo Interpretation Center, okay, epic.

2:20:42

He was getting all those things.

2:20:44

He had all the clearances from all the services.

2:20:47

He didn't tell me the whole story, but he told me, number one, that those

2:20:54

things had been photographed.

2:20:55

He told me that at the Robertson hearings in 1953, he had the Mariana movie,

2:21:04

you know, he gave it to the committee.

2:21:08

The committee took it somewhere and analyzed it.

2:21:11

They said they were seagulls, you know.

2:21:14

When he got the film back, the first 20 frames were missing from his film.

2:21:21

It's a very famous.

2:21:23

From the CIA film, the CIA laboratory analysis of the film.

2:21:28

Very famous film, footage of the UFOs back in 1950 by Nick Mariana.

2:21:32

So that tells you the level of the cover-up at that point, that they would do

2:21:36

that to their expert.

2:21:38

And then we talk about 1952.

2:21:41

In 1952, the official explanation came from Dr. Mansell at Harvard.

2:21:47

Those were inversions of temperature over Washington.

2:21:51

When it gets hot over Washington.

2:21:53

And there's photographs of these, right?

2:21:55

There was no photographs.

2:21:57

There was no photographs of what appeared over the White House?

2:22:00

No.

2:22:01

But there were, no.

2:22:02

But there were, you know, there was tracking, radar, you know, radar tracking

2:22:08

of it.

2:22:08

And he interpreted the radar as being inversions of temperature.

2:22:15

Multiple vehicles, right?

2:22:16

But they sent, of course, they sent the Air Force after it.

2:22:19

Yeah.

2:22:20

He said one of the pilots got permission to shoot, was authorized to shoot.

2:22:28

And shot, you know, a piece of metal out of one of the disks.

2:22:36

Those were disks that were flying.

2:22:38

They didn't care about the defenses.

2:22:40

They flew over the White House.

2:22:41

They flew, you know, over the major facilities in downtown Washington that are

2:22:47

forbidden.

2:22:48

I mean, there is no overflight.

2:22:52

And so they had to do something and they shot at it.

2:22:58

The thing was recovered.

2:23:00

The piece of metal.

2:23:02

The piece of metal was recovered.

2:23:03

And he told me, you know, I really shouldn't talk about what happened after

2:23:08

that.

2:23:08

There is no question that there was a piece of metal recovered from that

2:23:12

encounter.

2:23:13

And then it was shot off, you know, a flying disk over Washington in 1952.

2:23:19

And all the explanations that were given to the scientists and to the public

2:23:24

were BS.

2:23:25

Yeah.

2:23:26

Yeah.

2:23:27

I mean, we feature this case in the film.

2:23:29

And when and we have the guy that was actually in the radar room, this guy, Al

2:23:33

Chop.

2:23:33

And we had testimony from a gentleman that interviewed him, Tom Tullian, back

2:23:37

in 1990 something.

2:23:39

And it's very rare, extremely rare footage of an interview with the very man

2:23:44

who was in the radar room listening to the cockpit, listening to the pilot as

2:23:48

he was surrounded by UFOs right over the, you know, Washington, D.C. White

2:23:53

House Capitol building.

2:23:54

And he was terrified.

2:23:56

I mean, he suddenly found himself traveling at 600 miles an hour through the

2:24:00

pitch black darkness.

2:24:01

And he was surrounded by unknowns.

2:24:03

And he literally radios down to the tower and says, they're completely

2:24:06

surrounding me.

2:24:07

What do I do?

2:24:08

And they were speechless.

2:24:10

They didn't know what to tell the pilot.

2:24:12

They could see on the radar all the disks, all these UFOs around surrounding

2:24:16

this plane.

2:24:17

And Jock said, well, I know.

2:24:20

And we feature this in the film.

2:24:21

You probably remember that part.

2:24:23

And then Jock said, well, it goes a bit further there.

2:24:26

We actually did shoot at them.

2:24:28

And one of the pieces of the debris from the UFO fell to the ground.

2:24:33

It was recovered.

2:24:34

And where is that piece?

2:24:35

We went back and forth on whether to include that in the movie.

2:24:37

And I finally said.

2:24:38

I kept, you know, maybe at some point I'll be able to.

2:24:45

Tell you where it is.

2:24:47

Yeah.

2:24:48

Talk about the piece.

2:24:49

Sometime.

2:24:50

When would you be able to do it?

2:24:51

Yeah.

2:24:52

Do it now.

2:24:53

Why would you want to wait?

2:24:56

I think some of the, you know, I respect the need for certain things to be

2:25:08

managed in a particular way.

2:25:10

And it wouldn't really add to, you know, to the story to talk about that.

2:25:17

In the book, we go, you know, a lot further in talking about what those

2:25:23

materials are, you know, what the questions are, what the questions are for

2:25:29

science, but also what the questions are for disclosure, if there is over-disclosure.

2:25:35

But there isn't going to be one big disclosure that says, you know, we've got

2:25:41

contact with aliens from Alpha Centauri.

2:25:44

I mean, the disclosures come in layers.

2:25:47

They come, you know, everybody needs to get around, you know, the truth.

2:25:53

But this piece of metal from the 1950s, isn't it about time?

2:25:56

Yes.

2:25:57

So we've got others.

2:25:59

I mean, we've got plenty of others.

2:26:02

You can answer his question indirectly by that memo, the cross memo that we did

2:26:09

feature in the film and who wrote it.

2:26:12

He was a metallurgist.

2:26:13

And what lab was he working at?

2:26:15

So, you know, fast forward after 1952.

2:26:19

1952 was a disaster for the Air Force because they realized that their lines of

2:26:26

communication, which were already a network, it was a network of theletypes,

2:26:31

were saturated by people reporting UFOs, including Air Force bases reporting

2:26:38

UFOs.

2:26:39

And somebody thought if the Russians were to simulate a UFO thing by throwing,

2:26:48

you know, artificial things in the sky or whatever, they could saturate the

2:26:54

communication and we couldn't deploy the defense system.

2:26:58

So we've got to do something about it to reduce the level of reports from the

2:27:06

public.

2:27:07

So they created, they called together five of the top scientists in the land,

2:27:13

you know, Felton Page, Lou Alvarez, people like that, Nobel Prizes, people who

2:27:21

knew the nuclear secrets from the days of Oppenheimer and so on.

2:27:26

And they brought them to discuss what they should do and be briefed by Art Lundahl.

2:27:35

That's where he lost his 20 pictures.

2:27:39

Okay.

2:27:40

Which were the best pictures from the beginning of the film.

2:27:43

Okay.

2:27:44

You never saw again.

2:27:46

That's where Hynek testified.

2:27:48

But Hynek was, as he says, cooling his heels in the antechamber, in the lobby,

2:27:54

and they would only bring him in for a couple of things before the scientists.

2:28:00

They, long story short, the outcome was a classified recommendation to explain

2:28:08

away most of the phenomenon to the public, to reduce the number of reports.

2:28:14

So the, the idea wasn't to make the problem go away, it was to make the reports

2:28:19

go away, because the reports were clogging up the communication channels that

2:28:24

were vital to the defense of the country.

2:28:27

Okay.

2:28:28

That made sense.

2:28:29

I mean, there is usually some reason why the military does something.

2:28:34

Okay.

2:28:35

Sometimes it's not obvious, but in this case, they were, they were, it was

2:28:39

logical.

2:28:40

So Hynek was there and Hynek had a bunch of papers from his testimony and so on.

2:28:47

After my PhD at Northwestern, I, I had an office at the computing center.

2:28:53

There's a whole summer coming and I offered to Dr. Hynek to reorganize his

2:28:59

files, which were, you know, complete shamble.

2:29:03

And so he says, sure.

2:29:05

I mean, that would be great.

2:29:06

You can put it in new folders.

2:29:08

So I, I, I buy new clean folders and I start going for all the files because we

2:29:14

had copies of, you know, essentially 20,000 reports from the Air Force that

2:29:20

were unclassified.

2:29:22

And so I make these new things and I put everything back in order.

2:29:27

Uh, I also punch the cards for that so that we have a database at the same time,

2:29:33

which I still have.

2:29:34

And with the names of witnesses, by the way, which, and I find this folder,

2:29:42

which is full of stuff.

2:29:44

And in it, there is two pages, an onion skin.

2:29:49

Everybody, I mean, your audience, I'm sure your audience has no idea what an

2:29:56

onion skin is.

2:29:57

You know, when you have a typewriter, a hand typewriter, and you want to make

2:30:02

several copies, you put a carbon between the, and the first page is your letter.

2:30:09

And the others are, you know, thin paper, you know, that thin paper is called

2:30:14

an onion skin.

2:30:15

Of course, now we have computers, so we don't, we don't need carbon copies.

2:30:19

So it's a carbon copy of a memo from somebody I've never heard of to somebody

2:30:29

in the intelligence community saying we should not have that panel because we

2:30:35

are not ready.

2:30:37

And, which is interesting by itself, I mean, who are these people who want to

2:30:45

stop this top-level scientific panel of United States defense establishment?

2:30:52

I mean, who do they think they are?

2:30:54

The other thing about the memo is that it's stamped secret.

2:30:58

At that point, I still have a French passport, and I have a green card.

2:31:05

So I'm legally in the United States, but I'm not even a U.S. citizen.

2:31:10

I became a U.S. citizen.

2:31:12

You had to wait five years before you could apply for citizenship.

2:31:17

But I certainly didn't have any reason to look at a secret memo.

2:31:23

But I started reading it because I need to tell Hynek that this shouldn't be

2:31:29

here.

2:31:30

It shouldn't be in my files, okay?

2:31:33

Hynek told me that he had, not only had he forgotten that memo, but he didn't

2:31:42

think he had ever seen it.

2:31:43

That if he had seen it, that would have changed certain things.

2:31:47

Well, it turned out that group turned out two things.

2:31:52

Number one, that Robertson panel was not brought together by the Air Force.

2:31:58

It was brought together by other people in the intelligence community.

2:32:02

The Air Force was recovered.

2:32:04

The scientists were never told that.

2:32:06

They didn't know that.

2:32:08

So you bring together the top, you know, top clearance, top physicists in the U.S.,

2:32:15

including a couple of Nobel Prizes, and you don't tell them who you are.

2:32:22

Well, okay.

2:32:27

Can I step in just for a quick sec?

2:32:29

Because this was something that we featured, and it was a really complicated

2:32:32

story.

2:32:32

So basically what Jacques is saying leading up to this, we had a really

2:32:36

difficult time deciphering this.

2:32:37

So basically, there was that massive sighting in 1952 over Washington.

2:32:42

The Air Force had to do something.

2:32:44

They decided to convene a panel of the most smartest minds on how to deal with

2:32:48

this.

2:32:48

It was called the Robertson panel.

2:32:50

The Robertson panel was then told not to happen by this memo that you find,

2:32:57

which basically is an unknown government agency with more power, more influence

2:33:03

in the CIA.

2:33:03

It wasn't even an agency.

2:33:05

It was a contractor.

2:33:06

Contractor.

2:33:07

But it was a contractor.

2:33:09

They had a contract to look at UFOs.

2:33:12

And what they were saying is, you know, it's a good idea to bring the

2:33:15

scientists, but this is premature.

2:33:17

We're not ready to tell them about the patterns.

2:33:21

It's always about these were top level computer people in 1954.

2:33:26

They were working with punch cards, but punch cards work.

2:33:29

I mean, you know, there's nothing wrong with punch cards.

2:33:32

They were, they wanted to bring the best information, and then they had ideas

2:33:40

that they wanted to discuss about how to test their hypotheses about what UFOs

2:33:47

are.

2:33:47

The Robertson panel went on, ignored that memo.

2:33:51

It went on, and it concluded that the, they should discount the reports from

2:33:58

the public, and they should look at instrumentation from the military, which is

2:34:05

what people are doing now.

2:34:06

I mean, we see the, you know, we see the military with these advanced cameras,

2:34:11

the Nimitz, you know, all those things that are in your, in your movie.

2:34:14

And they've discounted reports.

2:34:16

They kept Project Blue Book going so that the public would have a place to

2:34:21

write if they saw something.

2:34:23

But it was a very low level thing.

2:34:25

It was never classified.

2:34:26

But we got to this, we got to this because you were saying about the

2:34:28

examination of the medal.

2:34:29

Yes.

2:34:30

We never got to that.

2:34:31

Well, the, the memo that, so when I discussed it with Hynek, and I got only one

2:34:41

other person in the confidence,

2:34:43

the memo came from an organization in Ohio called Battelle Memorial Institute.

2:34:53

Top organization on the analysis of metals.

2:34:59

They were the ones who invented titanium aluminide.

2:35:03

They were the ones who invented some of the coatings and some of the metals

2:35:09

used in, in spy planes, like that were used later in the U-2 in the SR-71,

2:35:16

those undetectable airplanes and so on.

2:35:19

They were at that time the experts.

2:35:22

They were also the experts on UFOs because they had a contract with the Air

2:35:28

Force.

2:35:29

And I think that, that memo, which I really didn't want to, you know, expose,

2:35:36

but I would have written that memo.

2:35:39

You know, I mean, that, that, that conference was an attempt to cover up the

2:35:46

reality.

2:35:47

And what, what the Battelle scientists were saying was, wait a minute, you know,

2:35:53

we, we, we need to look on the ground.

2:35:56

We need to simulate a UFO wave, see what the statistics are.

2:36:01

That's going to take another year.

2:36:03

Don't, don't convene that meeting now.

2:36:06

Right.

2:36:07

They were overridden.

2:36:08

They were.

2:36:09

But Joe's question is where would that piece of metal that was shot off the UFO,

2:36:14

that memo revealed, it was written by a metallurgist from the Memorial

2:36:18

Institute.

2:36:18

So if he had that metal in his possession, it would have been analyzed by a

2:36:22

metallurgist at the Memorial Institute.

2:36:24

Yeah.

2:36:25

But at that point, these, the different parts didn't, were not communicating.

2:36:30

But did they examine the metal?

2:36:32

Uh, I, I, I, I shouldn't talk about that.

2:36:38

Uh, I, I think, you know, the, the, the book talks about how complicated it is

2:36:48

to get, once you get the metals or the samples, whatever, what do you do with

2:36:54

it and what does it mean?

2:36:55

Why shouldn't you talk about whether or not they tested the metal?

2:36:58

Well, uh, because I'm not, I, I don't have the complete information.

2:37:04

You know, I mean, obviously that was classified.

2:37:07

Mm-hmm.

2:37:08

Art Rondahl told me that because, number one, you know, he, he knew that I knew

2:37:13

the rest of the story.

2:37:15

Uh, number two, I had just testified before, you know, a congressional panel,

2:37:24

uh, on crisis management for the United States of America.

2:37:28

So he, he knew that I understood how those things happen, you know, how they're

2:37:33

managed.

2:37:34

Um, but there is plenty of other metal.

2:37:38

I mean, I don't really care about that particular metal.

2:37:41

If it comes out.

2:37:42

You don't care about that particular metal?

2:37:44

Well, you know.

2:37:45

If there's a piece of metal that was shot off of a, but if there's a piece of

2:37:48

metal that was shot off of a UFO in 1952 that's proven to be of a consistency

2:37:54

or with some sort of a.

2:37:56

We have others.

2:37:57

We have others.

2:37:58

We have others.

2:37:59

What do we have?

2:38:00

Uh, we have others from, um, Argentina, from Brazil.

2:38:06

You said there was something from Brazil.

2:38:08

From Russia, from other places.

2:38:10

Has it been proven?

2:38:11

You were talking about isotopes.

2:38:12

And we're not the only, when I say we, I'm talking about my, no, my buddies and

2:38:17

the lab we have in Silicon Valley.

2:38:19

But these metals.

2:38:20

Other people have similar things.

2:38:22

Right.

2:38:23

These metals, have they been proven to be of a structure that we can't

2:38:27

replicate?

2:38:28

Uh, not what I've looked at so far.

2:38:32

What have you looked at so far that leads you to believe that they're extraterrestrial?

2:38:36

Um, the condition under which they were found and the reports from the

2:38:43

witnesses about what they did.

2:38:47

Okay.

2:38:48

But if you're talking about something that doesn't seem obviously extraterrestrial,

2:38:54

how do you know?

2:38:56

How do you know that this is an extraterrestrial piece of metal if it, if it,

2:39:00

if it, if it has the same characteristics of metal that you would find here on

2:39:04

Earth?

2:39:05

Um, the characteristics of the metal are going to be the same ones that we find

2:39:11

on Earth.

2:39:12

Because iron from, from Mars or Venus is like iron you can pick up.

2:39:18

Right.

2:39:19

But let's go back to the type where you're talking about that one particular

2:39:21

silicon matrix.

2:39:23

If it is engineered at the atomic level for say in 1954, at a level where our

2:39:33

technology hadn't evolved to the point of, for example, separating the isotopes.

2:39:39

And you've found things like this?

2:39:42

Uh, yes.

2:39:43

Not, not me, but some of my colleagues believe that they found things like that,

2:39:49

but they only had a tiny amount.

2:39:52

I went to Argentina and I got more of this stuff because there is still some,

2:39:57

some stuff there.

2:39:58

And I brought back test tubes with enough material that we are going to be

2:40:03

testing it again.

2:40:05

So they haven't tested anything that shows that it's clearly extraterrestrial.

2:40:10

No one has any concrete evidence from any of these samples.

2:40:13

The, the, the metal that was found in, in Brazil, where people described an

2:40:19

object flying over and then an explosion that showered, some of it fell in the

2:40:26

water, some of it fell in the sand on the beach, some of it fell on rooftops.

2:40:31

And so there was a lot of stuff.

2:40:34

And for a long time, we only had, you know, a pinhead work of stuff, which is

2:40:39

good enough for one measurement.

2:40:41

But people told me you can't come here with one measurement.

2:40:45

You need 20 different machines, different things, different techniques, if you

2:40:50

want to do it right.

2:40:51

So that's what we're doing.

2:40:52

Right. But do you understand that what I'm asking?

2:40:54

I'm asking, is there, is there one smoking gun?

2:40:56

Is there one piece of metal that you can say this, this was made at a time, or

2:41:01

this is from 1952.

2:41:03

There was no technology to recreate this metal then.

2:41:05

We didn't know how to make this.

2:41:07

Well, the one that I'm talking about was 57 over Ubatuba in Brazil.

2:41:14

And other groups have the similar thing.

2:41:17

And we'll compare notes.

2:41:19

But the, what was found was that one of the components of the magnesium, one of

2:41:24

the isotopes of the magnesium,

2:41:26

was way over what it would be in nature, in the natural magnesium.

2:41:32

Which means somebody took it apart and reformulated the magnesium.

2:41:36

And magnesium is very light and very strong, unusual metal.

2:41:41

Yes, it also ignites in contact with air.

2:41:43

And so it blows up easily.

2:41:46

And the reason our sample doesn't blow up is that there is oxide.

2:41:52

It oxidizes very quickly.

2:41:54

So there is a layer of magnesium oxide on top of it.

2:41:58

And the analyses, some of the analyses that have been done would indicate that,

2:42:06

number one, it's extremely pure.

2:42:09

Purer than the Dow standard for magnesium.

2:42:13

But, you know, again, if you go to see a physicist, he'll say, well, I can buy

2:42:19

the Dow standard and I can refine it further.

2:42:22

Right.

2:42:23

In my lab.

2:42:24

Okay.

2:42:25

It's, Dow, Dow Chemical, you know, they supply metals to everybody.

2:42:29

Right.

2:42:30

They didn't, never had a commercial need for that.

2:42:34

But if I have a need for that, I can do it.

2:42:37

Okay.

2:42:38

So that doesn't prove anything.

2:42:39

But if we can verify it, and if we can look at the, you know, the ratio of the

2:42:46

other isotopes and so on, highly precisely, which we can do now.

2:42:51

But that hasn't been done yet?

2:42:53

No.

2:42:54

No.

2:42:55

We'll do it in the next few months.

2:42:57

Okay.

2:42:58

So the answer is, if I can round this out, there's no real clear evidence that

2:43:03

any of this metal is extraterrestrial.

2:43:05

Correct.

2:43:06

So when you say we have lots of metal that seems to have come from a UFO, what

2:43:11

would lead you to think that if none of this has been proven to be extraterrestrial?

2:43:17

Well, because people saw the thing crash.

2:43:20

Yeah, but people don't always tell the truth, right?

2:43:23

Isn't part of the problem is that people don't always tell the truth?

2:43:26

Yeah, but if they come up with, if they say this thing crashed, you know, you've

2:43:31

got ordinary people in Brazil in that little town.

2:43:34

You've got the police, you've got the, you know, telling you that this thing

2:43:38

fell.

2:43:39

And here is the stuff.

2:43:40

You take the stuff to the lab.

2:43:42

But is this stuff clearly manufactured?

2:43:45

Is it clearly refined and manufactured?

2:43:47

Yeah.

2:43:48

So this is not something that could have come from an asteroid?

2:43:50

No.

2:43:51

Okay.

2:43:52

No.

2:43:53

I asked the same question.

2:43:54

I was in the lab with him and Gary Nolan.

2:43:55

Uh-huh.

2:43:56

And I was exactly like you.

2:43:57

I was like, well, what are you, I'm, I'm.

2:43:59

Right.

2:44:00

Where's the evidence?

2:44:01

And Gary said to me, and some of which had to be edited down a little bit,

2:44:05

because it was, I think he went a little beyond the comfort zone of Stanford

2:44:08

University.

2:44:09

He said to me that what we're looking at has an isotopic value that he didn't

2:44:14

understand, that if it was to be recreated on Earth, it would be in the

2:44:18

billions of dollars to do it.

2:44:19

Yeah.

2:44:20

That's what he told me.

2:44:21

Yeah.

2:44:22

Then he said to me, we, we don't understand it.

2:44:25

It's, it's engineered at an atomic level.

2:44:28

We are learning that with this new device that we have in Silicon Valley.

2:44:31

We don't understand it.

2:44:32

We want to understand it.

2:44:34

And we feel like it could be revolutionary breakthrough technologically if we

2:44:38

could understand it.

2:44:40

And this other material that in the Silicon Valley that they were, had

2:44:44

discovered 20 years ago that your friend had analyzed and he said there's

2:44:48

nothing like it and we've seen nothing like it since then.

2:44:51

Yeah.

2:44:52

This man who was given.

2:44:53

Right.

2:44:54

That sample.

2:44:55

Right.

2:44:56

And we don't know where that is now.

2:44:57

Right.

2:44:58

We don't know where it is.

2:44:59

We don't know where that is.

2:45:00

But, but he said an ortho, you know, a matrix of orthosilicate.

2:45:07

Yeah.

2:45:08

That he couldn't probe with in his lab.

2:45:13

And, you know, obviously, Battelle would have been a logical place to, to look

2:45:18

at that because they had all the people who signed that memo were metallurgists.

2:45:27

Yeah.

2:45:28

So that makes you think of something.

2:45:29

Right.

2:45:30

I get frustrated with it too because I went to the lab and I saw the machine.

2:45:38

I saw the metal samples, which you carried around like this.

2:45:41

You never let them out of your sight.

2:45:42

And I said, Jesus, are you paranoid or something?

2:45:44

What are you worried about?

2:45:45

You said these things have a strange way.

2:45:46

They have a way of disappearing.

2:45:47

Of disappearing.

2:45:48

And, and I asked the same questions you're asking.

2:45:50

Well, what do we know?

2:45:51

And they're very, you know, he's concerned that he's going to make a statement

2:45:55

that's going to be, be premature.

2:45:58

That the further scientific analysis that the scientific journals and the peer

2:46:02

review hasn't happened yet.

2:46:04

And therefore he's being really conservative.

2:46:06

But basically what he's telling me is the stuff's engineered at an atomic level.

2:46:10

It would be in the billions of dollars to recreate if we could even recreate it.

2:46:13

And we're talking about pieces that recovered as early as 47 and 57 and, you

2:46:18

know, et cetera.

2:46:19

So it's extremely exciting, but they're, it's too early to make any concrete

2:46:25

statements.

2:46:26

Okay.

2:46:27

But that's much better.

2:46:28

Yeah.

2:46:29

At least you're saying that there is something, some evidence that shows that

2:46:33

there's something and whether or not it's made from materials that exist as we

2:46:38

know it currently on earth, it's made in a way that there's no way anyone can

2:46:44

make it today without like some insane budget.

2:46:46

And much less likely in the 1940s.

2:46:50

Yes.

2:46:51

Yes.

2:46:52

Well, again, this is human testimony.

2:46:54

Yes.

2:46:55

You know, this scientist from that, that company with that matrix of orthosilicate,

2:47:03

the, the Air Force colonel who told me about the thing he could lift with one

2:47:07

finger, you know, a whole wing.

2:47:11

The, you know, colonel Corso with the stuff that he recovered, that he was

2:47:18

given by the army.

2:47:20

I mean, initially the army had, had the project to, to analyze this.

2:47:25

And, right after the war.

2:47:28

And that, um, he gave to the different labs.

2:47:32

Um, what we need to do is go through the normal scientific publication process.

2:47:40

Why hasn't this happened?

2:47:42

Uh, every time somebody tried, Dr. Hynek tried, they wouldn't publish it.

2:47:47

But in 2020, don't you think there'd be more likely to be interested in

2:47:52

possibly publish this?

2:47:54

We'll, we'll find out.

2:47:56

So you still have all these metals in your possession or in someone's

2:47:59

possession?

2:48:00

Yes.

2:48:01

Yes.

2:48:02

What other kind of evidence is there?

2:48:04

Is there anything else that's compelling?

2:48:07

Um, I don't know of any biological evidence.

2:48:11

That's what would...

2:48:13

Like a body, you mean?

2:48:15

Well, we don't even need a body.

2:48:18

I mean, you need saliva from a Martian.

2:48:21

Right.

2:48:22

We can do the DNA.

2:48:24

I brought this up with, with Christopher Mellon recently.

2:48:27

And because you, you hear that same old argument, you know, oh, you know, the

2:48:31

skeptic.

2:48:31

And I think it's perfectly healthy to be skeptical.

2:48:33

I'm going to be the first one to tell you that the vast majority...

2:48:35

You must.

2:48:36

...of UFO reports can and have been explained away in sort of down-to-earth

2:48:40

conventional terms.

2:48:40

But there's that core 10 or 15% of cases that truly, after careful scientific

2:48:47

investigation, defy a terrestrial explanation.

2:48:49

And those are the cases that we focus on.

2:48:51

And I asked Christopher Mellon.

2:48:53

What do you say to the skeptic that says, oh, there's clearly just anecdotal

2:48:57

evidence as to the reality of UFOs?

2:48:58

He's like, well, we put that to bed a long time ago.

2:49:01

You've got visual confirmation, radar confirmation, ground-to-air visual and

2:49:08

ground-to-air radar.

2:49:10

You've got photographic evidence from the cockpits of these military aircraft.

2:49:14

You've got landing prints in the ground.

2:49:17

You've got soil sample analysis from the propulsion.

2:49:21

You've got plants and soil samples.

2:49:25

There's a preponderance of evidence of cases all around the world.

2:49:30

You know, the only question is, you know, who are they?

2:49:33

What do they want?

2:49:34

Where do they come from?

2:49:35

I mean, that seems to be where we need to set our sights.

2:49:37

And Senator Reid said something really interesting to me.

2:49:40

He's like, look, just because we don't understand something, it doesn't mean we

2:49:43

should shy away from it.

2:49:44

It doesn't mean, you know, we should, you know, focus in the scientific

2:49:48

community and get to the bottom of it and put the necessary resources in place

2:49:53

and stop treating this like a taboo subject that we have to all, you know, shy

2:49:58

away from.

2:49:59

Well, whoever has a stranglehold on the information, the intelligence community

2:50:04

seems to be in a position where a lot of what they have is, I don't know.

2:50:09

Yeah.

2:50:10

And they don't want to say that.

2:50:11

They're also sitting on footage of, you know, apparently, according to all the

2:50:15

people, the military guys I've talked to, crystal clear photographic evidence,

2:50:19

landing film footage evidence, cockpit film recording evidence.

2:50:24

I mean, there's that statement I read earlier from about this latest story

2:50:28

breaking about two Navy pilots getting one triangular shaped UFO that came out

2:50:32

of the water.

2:50:33

They've got a crystal clear photograph of that, that they're not releasing to

2:50:36

the public.

2:50:37

So I think we should get the pressure on for further government transparency.

2:50:41

I really do.

2:50:42

And I think that the more tangible, solid, compelling evidence needs to get

2:50:46

released.

2:50:47

It's so fascinating.

2:50:48

And everybody wants to see something like this.

2:50:51

You know, it's the biggest story ever.

2:50:53

I mean, the cockpit recordings that Christopher Mellon snuck out of the

2:50:56

Pentagon that ended up on the page of the New York Times.

2:50:58

That was huge.

2:50:59

Everybody is waiting for that type of evidence.

2:51:01

We know it's there.

2:51:03

We've had confirmation from extremely high level government officials, people

2:51:06

in the intelligence agency saying it's there.

2:51:09

We just have to get it released.

2:51:11

Well, at the Al Gore hearings about emergency management, the question of the

2:51:19

satellites came up.

2:51:21

And somebody said, one of the Congress people, we pay you guys to deploy these

2:51:30

satellites.

2:51:31

And you look at the Earth, you know, all the time, you know, with 10

2:51:35

centimeters, you know, resolution.

2:51:37

So if you see something, you should be able to, that could be a crisis.

2:51:43

You should be able to tell us if it's going to threaten the population of the

2:51:48

United States.

2:51:49

There was one guy there who didn't laugh because he was respectful of the

2:51:54

committee.

2:51:55

But he said, with all due respect, I cannot under the, you know, this audience,

2:52:03

I cannot tell you where I work.

2:52:05

But, you know, there are three letters to my employer.

2:52:11

And what I can tell you is that I measure every morning the amount of snow that

2:52:21

has fallen on the nose of the statue of Dzerzhinsky in downtown Moscow in front

2:52:29

of the headquarters of the KGB.

2:52:31

I can measure, I can tell you how much snow fell that night because I measure

2:52:36

it.

2:52:37

So that tells you, you know, the kind of instrument that we have.

2:52:45

I'm, by regulation, by law, I must turn off my satellite when it flies over the

2:52:53

United States.

2:52:55

I'm not spying on your house.

2:52:59

If you authorize me to run the satellite, to run the, you know, acquisition, I

2:53:07

could tell you when there is going to be a flood in Arizona.

2:53:11

Because I measure the, I could measure the amount of the snow that fell, you

2:53:16

know, on the Rockies last night.

2:53:18

And we've got these climate prediction schedules, we can approximately tell you

2:53:26

where it might melt, and where it's going to go when it melts, and how big the

2:53:31

reservoirs are going to be, and when the reservoirs are going to overflow.

2:53:36

But I'm not authorized by law to look at any of the data, and if I looked at it,

2:53:44

I wouldn't be authorized to disclose it to you, because you're not cleared for

2:53:49

the characteristics of my, the resolution of my device.

2:53:54

And I'm sure that, you know, in March, I'm going to be sitting with my wife and

2:54:00

my kids looking at the TV, and I'm going to see this woman in Arizona, with her

2:54:07

two babies in her arm, up to here in her kitchen, up to here in water, because

2:54:12

the dam has flooded, because it happens every winter, because the snow melts,

2:54:18

so it comes down.

2:54:19

But I'm not authorized to tell her, and even if I told her, I would have to

2:54:24

tell the governor, the governor would have to tell the sheriff, and the sheriff

2:54:30

would have to disclose, you know, send somebody there.

2:54:34

But did he say?

2:54:36

There are four levels of management.

2:54:38

Did he indicate they were picking up UFOs?

2:54:40

No, no, well, we were not talking about UFOs, we were talking about emergencies.

2:54:46

But you were saying that if we have these satellites that can do these

2:54:49

incredible things, why are we not picking up UFOs?

2:54:52

Well, no, I'm saying why, if they are picking up UFOs, why they are not telling

2:54:58

us?

2:54:59

They can't even tell us when there is going to be a flood in Arizona.

2:55:02

Okay, so they might be picking up these UFOs.

2:55:05

And there is a good reason, there is a good reason for that.

2:55:06

They might be picking up these UFOs, but they're not giving us the data.

2:55:09

That's what Art Londaar was saying about his experience.

2:55:16

The other compelling story of abduction that you had briefly brought up for a

2:55:20

second before we were still on the Betty and Barney Hill story was Travis Walt.

2:55:25

Yes, we interviewed Travis potentially for the film and then opted to kind of

2:55:32

avoid that aspect of, I don't consider the Travis Walton an abduction so much

2:55:37

as an encounter that didn't end well.

2:55:40

And he probably was taken aboard to get recovered.

2:55:42

What do you mean?

2:55:43

Well, they were in the woods, Snowflake, Arizona, I think it was 1975.

2:55:48

It was a logger, right?

2:55:49

It was a logger.

2:55:50

They had a contract with the government to log a certain area or to clear a

2:55:55

certain area.

2:55:56

And it was late and they were behind on the schedule, so they were working a

2:56:00

little bit later than they normally would.

2:56:02

And they all got in the truck.

2:56:03

They had a four-door truck that had like seven of them driving out and they saw

2:56:08

a light in the sky, they thought it was a fire.

2:56:10

And as they got closer to it, it was this perfect disc hovering about treetop

2:56:14

level right out the window.

2:56:16

I mean, they said he could have hit with a rock.

2:56:18

And he told the driver, Travis Walton, stop the truck.

2:56:21

I'm going to jump out.

2:56:22

And they all against their will, don't do that, Travis.

2:56:24

And he just leapt out of the truck and started running towards this thing

2:56:28

thinking it was going to just shoot off.

2:56:30

But it didn't.

2:56:31

It stayed there.

2:56:32

And as he got closer to it, he started to kind of freak out a little bit.

2:56:36

And it started making a weird sound like it was spooling up or something.

2:56:40

And so he tucked down behind a log that was on the ground.

2:56:43

And they're screaming at him in the truck, get back, get back here.

2:56:47

What are you doing?

2:56:48

And he realized he was dangerously close to this thing.

2:56:51

So he was going to make a run for the truck.

2:56:53

And he got up as this thing was spooling up according to him.

2:56:57

It was .

2:56:58

And he tried to make a run for the truck.

2:57:00

And some kind of energy force hit him and knocked him like a raggedy end all

2:57:04

all the way across like 60 feet.

2:57:06

And he landed.

2:57:07

And those guys took off thinking they were next.

2:57:09

And they left him for dead out there in the woods.

2:57:13

And they're driving down the road, hightailing it out of there.

2:57:16

And then the driver realizes like, we can't leave Travis, man.

2:57:19

We got to go back and get Travis.

2:57:20

And they were all freaked out thinking that they were going to be next.

2:57:23

Finally, they argued and he said, look, man, I'm going back to get Travis,

2:57:26

whether you guys are with me or not.

2:57:28

And if you want, you guys can stay here.

2:57:31

I'll come back and get you.

2:57:32

They're like, no, no, let's stick together.

2:57:33

So they all sit together in the truck.

2:57:34

They turned around.

2:57:35

They went back.

2:57:36

UFO gone.

2:57:37

Travis gone.

2:57:38

They go down into town and they have to tell the authorities.

2:57:41

And you can imagine, 1975, they're telling local authorities.

2:57:44

And there was a small enough town where everybody kind of knows everybody.

2:57:47

Hey, our buddy got abducted by a flying saucer and he's gone.

2:57:50

They were like, yeah, you guys are all under arrest for homicide.

2:57:54

We'll start an intense search the next day with helicopters, dogs.

2:57:57

It made world news all across, you know, as you can imagine.

2:58:00

These guys took lie detector tests.

2:58:02

But, you know, they stuck to their story, even though they knew that people

2:58:05

wouldn't believe them.

2:58:05

They thought they'd killed Travis and then they buried him somewhere in the in

2:58:09

the in the hills.

2:58:09

So they're all doing this five day intensive search.

2:58:12

Well, Travis, Travis Walton reappears five days later with facial growth.

2:58:16

Here's the really fascinating part of this story that I find incredible because,

2:58:21

again, don't look at what these the phenomenon does.

2:58:24

Sometimes you look at what they don't do.

2:58:26

Well, they didn't drop them off where they picked them up.

2:58:28

That was the most I've been out there.

2:58:30

It's a really remote area in the mountains, in the forest.

2:58:33

He would not have made it back alive.

2:58:35

Drop them off in the middle of town.

2:58:37

They didn't do that either.

2:58:38

But they dropped them off right on the outskirts of town.

2:58:41

So he could a they would they did it in a little valley.

2:58:44

So they minimized any possibility of their exposure.

2:58:46

They dropped them off in a place where he could get help, but they would

2:58:50

minimize being seen.

2:58:51

They did it at night.

2:58:52

And five days later, he reappears.

2:58:54

And of course, he he's back and he recounts the same story.

2:58:58

And he's been recounting the same story.

2:59:00

And what is his story?

2:59:01

Story is he woke up.

2:59:03

It's funny.

2:59:04

Actually, I met with Travis a handful of times and I sat down with him.

2:59:08

And a lot of times when I really want to absorb a story, I close my eyes and

2:59:13

then their words recreate the visuals for me.

2:59:15

So I see it.

2:59:16

And so that's what I did with Travis at dinner.

2:59:18

Just the two of us.

2:59:19

And I close my eyes and he told me he woke up on board.

2:59:24

He was on a table.

2:59:26

And there were and he was kind of blurry eyed, but he could see these little

2:59:31

beans.

2:59:32

And initially thought, what am I looking at here?

2:59:36

Where am I?

2:59:37

And he saw these little beans and typical beans, the diminutive body, big head,

2:59:43

big almond shaped black eyes.

2:59:45

And he was absolutely terrified and he grabbed some sort of instrument that was

2:59:48

on the table.

2:59:49

And he said that he even touched one of them.

2:59:51

And he goes, I was surprised at how light it was.

2:59:53

It moved really easily.

2:59:54

And he started aggressively swinging some instrument that he found on the table

2:59:58

towards these things.

2:59:59

And then they scurried off and left the room.

3:00:01

He went off.

3:00:02

They went to the right.

3:00:03

He went left.

3:00:04

And he was walking down a hallway and he said, you can imagine like polished

3:00:08

aluminum.

3:00:09

There were no seams, no rivets, no weld marks, but it was all solid, like one

3:00:13

solid piece.

3:00:14

And he said it was tight.

3:00:15

And my shoulders were rubbing on either side of these, of this hallway.

3:00:18

And I was running down the hallway, totally freaked out, didn't know where he

3:00:22

was.

3:00:22

And he could have having a hard time breathing.

3:00:24

And he took a left and he went into this room and there was a command chair.

3:00:29

And in the, he sat in the command chair and he started playing with buttons.

3:00:35

He was trying to get out.

3:00:36

He just wanted to get out.

3:00:37

And all of a sudden there was a holographic projection of like a star chart

3:00:41

that was holographic that appeared.

3:00:43

And he was moving with these buttons and everything started to move.

3:00:47

And he thought, my God, if I'm on a spaceship, I could crash this thing.

3:00:50

I don't know what I'm doing.

3:00:51

And then two very humanoid looking people, beautiful angelic people with these

3:00:56

glass bulbs came in with tight fitting suits on.

3:00:58

And he said, oh, my God, you guys are here to save me.

3:01:01

Thank God.

3:01:02

But they wouldn't talk with him.

3:01:03

They just took him by the arm and they escorted him out.

3:01:06

He went down a ramp.

3:01:08

And then he said, I was either in a hangar or I was in a big, huge, another

3:01:12

spaceship.

3:01:13

I don't know if it was a huge hammer hanger on the, on the, on the ground, or

3:01:16

if it was another spaceship, but there were lots of discs of different sizes

3:01:21

parked inside this hanger looking thing, but it was indoors.

3:01:24

And they escorted him out with a, met with another, a woman.

3:01:28

I said, well, how do you know it was a woman?

3:01:29

He said, it was a woman.

3:01:30

It had a glass bulb and they, they took something over his mouth and he kind of

3:01:35

fought, but he said he was weak.

3:01:36

And the next thing he knew, he woke up in a field and looked up and the, and

3:01:39

the disc was just leaving, departing.

3:01:41

And it was five days later.

3:01:43

Whoa.

3:01:44

Yeah.

3:01:44

And there was a movie made about it called fire in the sky.

3:01:46

Fire in the sky.

3:01:47

But the ending was, Tracy Torme wrote that.

3:01:50

And the ending of the film was changed at the last minute and it was inaccurate.

3:01:53

The, the, the, the, yeah, because the.

3:01:55

Fucking Hollywood.

3:01:56

I know Hollywood.

3:01:57

Exactly.

3:01:58

These motherfuckers.

3:01:59

Yeah, I know.

3:02:00

And he fought it and they said, look, you want the movie to get made?

3:02:02

They were changed in the ending, but that's the real ending in the movie.

3:02:05

That was right from Travis Walton to me.

3:02:07

Wow.

3:02:08

But I decided in the movie.

3:02:09

Is he still alive?

3:02:10

Yes, he is.

3:02:11

Snowflake, Arizona.

3:02:12

I believe he still lives there.

3:02:14

Wow.

3:02:15

Yeah.

3:02:16

He's great.

3:02:17

His story is exactly the way.

3:02:18

How old is he now?

3:02:19

He's probably maybe late sixties.

3:02:21

Yeah.

3:02:22

And, and I went to the actual site with him.

3:02:24

We actually drove out to that site.

3:02:25

And I tell you, man, when we got there, he got out of the car and he was just

3:02:30

running,

3:02:31

just running towards the spot.

3:02:33

It had recently snowed and there was snow in the ground and I couldn't keep up

3:02:36

with him.

3:02:36

But he was running to go to the exact location of where, and I could see him

3:02:40

reliving the

3:02:40

whole thing.

3:02:41

I mean, it was a really powerful moment with him.

3:02:44

And it was a very, very remote area of the mountain range.

3:02:48

It's a very compelling story.

3:02:49

It's a really compelling story.

3:02:51

And they all passed.

3:02:52

And I interviewed a number of the eyewitnesses that were with him at the time.

3:02:55

And there was a movie made about it called Travis.

3:02:57

I believe you should definitely look into it, but a documentary, but he was

3:03:01

really funny.

3:03:02

He was working at like a, a Walmart.

3:03:04

You were going to say pass a polygraph test.

3:03:06

Yeah, they all did.

3:03:07

Yeah.

3:03:08

But I was talking to one of the witnesses.

3:03:09

I'll never forget this.

3:03:10

And he, and I was like, God, what did you see?

3:03:12

Can you describe what the disc looked like?

3:03:14

And he goes, you ever seen like a brand new Corvette?

3:03:18

Like that beautiful brand new Corvette.

3:03:20

And I said, yeah, I have.

3:03:22

He goes, it was more perfect than that.

3:03:24

It was just this perfect disc.

3:03:26

And he said it was lit up.

3:03:28

Like you could see these almost little windows in it.

3:03:30

And it just suspended in this darkness.

3:03:32

And it was kind of just wobbling there.

3:03:34

But the way he describes it, he made the correlation of a Corvette, a brand new

3:03:37

Corvette.

3:03:38

Isn't that funny?

3:03:39

Yeah.

3:03:40

And yeah, it's a fascinating case.

3:03:42

And I, I decided that this is the first film that I was dealing with.

3:03:47

It was my fourth one that I dealt with close encounters of the third kind,

3:03:51

which is when there were, you know, the witnesses claimed to report beans.

3:03:54

And that was about as far as I wanted to go with it because I,

3:03:57

I was concerned about the mainstream participation I was getting with like

3:04:02

Harry Reid and Podesta and Governor Bill Richardson and,

3:04:05

and those Christopher Mellon, Jacques Vallée.

3:04:08

And I was concerned not to go too far with it and to take baby steps.

3:04:13

And one of the things that's been incredibly exciting for me to see for the

3:04:17

first time, keep in mind is my fourth film on the topic,

3:04:21

is that not only are we seeing a, we've got people like Dan Farah, who's a

3:04:26

mainstream, you know,

3:04:28

you've produced Ready Player One with Steven Spielberg, who's attaching, he's

3:04:31

the latest producer who's associating himself with this film.

3:04:34

But you're getting like Harry Reid and all these household names that are not

3:04:40

only looking at it, participating in it, but publicly endorsing it.

3:04:43

And that is extremely exciting because that is an indication that people are

3:04:47

getting ready for this story to come out.

3:04:50

You know what I'm, what I'm saying?

3:04:52

Yeah.

3:04:53

And it, I felt it was important to take those baby steps and, and not go too

3:04:57

far.

3:04:57

Cause there are some aspects of the phenomenon that if you're unfamiliar with

3:05:00

it might, might be a bit of a stretch.

3:05:03

And so.

3:05:03

Well, it seems like the public is more interested and more open to it now than

3:05:06

ever before.

3:05:07

And it seems less ridiculous.

3:05:09

Oh, totally.

3:05:10

No.

3:05:11

Yeah.

3:05:12

No question about it.

3:05:13

Yeah.

3:05:14

The New York Times thing really made the difference.

3:05:15

I firmly believe that.

3:05:16

Yeah.

3:05:17

It did for sure did.

3:05:18

Cause it was sent to me by a bunch of my friends that are like legitimate

3:05:22

intellectuals, professors, scholars, like people that are really, really smart.

3:05:26

Like, look, this is right up your alley.

3:05:28

Like, look at this New York Times now.

3:05:29

Uh huh.

3:05:30

Exactly.

3:05:31

And I had people that had been ridiculing me, really killing me for decades ago.

3:05:34

Oh my God.

3:05:35

I mean like the guy that lives across the street from where I grew up, his

3:05:37

Walter Murch senior.

3:05:39

Did apocalypse now.

3:05:40

Okay.

3:05:41

He's like the pinnacle of success editor.

3:05:43

And he's always kind of made little jabs at me over the years.

3:05:46

And then he finally goes, boy, James, you might've been, you might be right.

3:05:50

That was really satisfying for me.

3:05:52

And then to see Lou Elizondo publicly endorsed the film.

3:05:55

And we're talking about like, if you think about it, you've got people endorsing

3:06:01

a film that take my name off.

3:06:03

And it's just stories that we reported on, but that deals with potential close

3:06:07

encounters of the third kind.

3:06:09

That's so amazing.

3:06:10

I mean, if you walk down the street and you meet average Joe and you say, hey,

3:06:13

did you hear about the UFO that landed in Africa?

3:06:15

The occupants got out and communicated telepathically.

3:06:17

Get the fuck out of here.

3:06:19

Get the fuck out of here.

3:06:20

Go so crazy somewhere else.

3:06:22

Like you would.

3:06:23

Yeah.

3:06:24

But it's happening.

3:06:25

We feature it.

3:06:26

We were in the edit room for three and a half, four years.

3:06:28

And we said, where are we going?

3:06:29

We're on the road to Rua.

3:06:30

That was our mantra.

3:06:31

Road to Rua.

3:06:32

What we meant was, let's compile the evidence and let's build our case so we

3:06:37

can allow the audience to walk away at the end of the film saying, that landing

3:06:42

case in Africa might have actually just happened.

3:06:44

And I think we succeeded.

3:06:45

The thing about all these cases, whether it's Travis Walton or Betty and Barney

3:06:49

Hill or the African case is if you weren't there and you've never experienced

3:06:54

anything like it, it was just this one unique thing that happened.

3:06:59

It would be, it's so hard for anyone to accept unless you see it with your own

3:07:03

eyes, unless you're actually there, unless you experience it.

3:07:07

It's so hard and it's so easy to be incredulous.

3:07:09

It's so easy to be skeptical.

3:07:11

But when you get people like David Fravor.

3:07:14

Yeah.

3:07:15

Oh, he's so compelling.

3:07:16

He's so compelling.

3:07:17

You listen to his testimony and then you listen to the parallels of the

3:07:20

observed technology, the no wings and how baffled he was with the whole thing.

3:07:24

And then you hear the stories, the same technologies back in the forties and fifties

3:07:29

ago.

3:07:29

You should listen to him on, I don't know if you've listened to him on Lex

3:07:31

Friedman's podcast.

3:07:32

No, I haven't.

3:07:33

It's amazing because Lex, you know, Lex is, he does, he did artificial

3:07:37

intelligence work with MIT, brilliant guy.

3:07:40

And him and David Fravor go on forever.

3:07:43

Oh, wow.

3:07:44

And the experience, the encounter.

3:07:45

And also just his understanding and knowledge of aircrafts and, and of just of

3:07:49

air travel.

3:07:50

And it's a, it's an insane story.

3:07:53

Like I had him on my podcast with Jeremy Corbell and that was great, but it was

3:07:57

even better on Lex Friedman's podcast because it was just Lex and David

3:08:01

together.

3:08:02

And they went deep into the weeds about the story.

3:08:05

Yeah.

3:08:06

I mean, apparently there was an object under the water, which we were like, ah,

3:08:09

did we cover that?

3:08:10

We kind of mentioned it quickly in the film.

3:08:11

There's so many aspects of that.

3:08:13

The thing is he could only see the water breaking over the top of it.

3:08:16

He couldn't see the actual object itself, but there's many stories about things

3:08:20

that are in the water.

3:08:21

And if you wanted to have a base or you wanted to have some sort of a, of a

3:08:25

mothership and you wanted to hide it in plain view, I mean, 90% of the earth's

3:08:30

ocean is undiscovered or unexplored.

3:08:32

I mean, it's, you could easily hide something in there and no one would ever

3:08:35

see it.

3:08:36

Uh, that's one thing Christopher Mellon said.

3:08:39

He was disappointed with the New York times.

3:08:41

And I thought, well, gosh, the New York times did something pretty brave, I

3:08:44

think.

3:08:44

And the due diligence they did, apparently according to the authors was insane.

3:08:47

They had to cross check everything, make sure they had to speak to Harry Reid.

3:08:51

They had to see the government documents.

3:08:52

They had to verify the existence of a tip.

3:08:55

I mean, they really worked hard at it, but Christopher Mellon said, well, they

3:08:58

kind of missed it.

3:08:59

I said, what do you mean they missed it?

3:09:00

He goes, well, it's great.

3:09:01

They revealed the eight tip program, that secret Pentagon program.

3:09:03

But the bigger story was these things are real and they're here.

3:09:08

This is happening now.

3:09:09

They've been going in and out of our oceans for 270 days out of 365 in 2015.

3:09:14

And that they, the Navy finally just said, we can't stop them.

3:09:18

We've tried to intercept them.

3:09:19

They fly rings around us.

3:09:20

Just leave them alone.

3:09:21

That's crazy.

3:09:22

Crazy.

3:09:23

Because that's what, when David Fravor was communicating with the, was it the

3:09:27

ship?

3:09:28

Well, who was he communicating with that was telling them?

3:09:30

Nimitz.

3:09:31

Yeah.

3:09:32

Yeah.

3:09:33

On the radar.

3:09:34

Going up into space.

3:09:35

Yeah.

3:09:36

They would go from outer space.

3:09:37

80,000 feet was the highest we could detect them.

3:09:39

And then they'd shoot down to the, to like five feet over the water.

3:09:42

In a second.

3:09:43

Like that.

3:09:44

Yeah.

3:09:45

Yeah.

3:09:46

And then just, you know, shooting around.

3:09:47

And then they, of course, getting visual confirmation, but they didn't even do

3:09:50

anything

3:09:50

for like, was it days or weeks?

3:09:51

Yeah.

3:09:52

Leading up to that.

3:09:53

Yeah.

3:09:54

It's crazy.

3:09:55

I mean, your documentary is fantastic.

3:09:56

I really enjoyed it.

3:09:57

I watched it twice.

3:09:58

It's excellent.

3:09:59

Your contribution in it is amazing too.

3:10:00

And I really appreciate you guys coming down here and talking about it.

3:10:04

And I can't recommend the documentary enough.

3:10:06

If you're into UFOs like I am, obviously it's the phenomenon.

3:10:10

It's on, I got it off of iTunes, Apple.

3:10:13

I was going to say.

3:10:14

Apple TV.

3:10:15

Thank you for that.

3:10:16

I really appreciate you saying that.

3:10:17

But if, if, if, if you want to rent it, rent it.

3:10:19

But if you want to buy it for the same price on iTunes or Vimeo, they offer

3:10:24

three hours

3:10:24

of bonus free material.

3:10:25

So if you're going to purchase it, do it from iTunes or Vimeo.

3:10:28

Don't forget to rate.

3:10:29

And I want to put a shout out to Ernie Klein.

3:10:31

He's got ready player two out right now.

3:10:33

He's been incredibly supportive of us.

3:10:35

He's right here from, from Austin, Texas.

3:10:38

And, and my writing partner, Mark Barish has been incredibly helpful.

3:10:42

Jamie, didn't you just start reading ready player one?

3:10:44

Indeed.

3:10:45

Ready player two rather.

3:10:46

The new one.

3:10:47

Yeah.

3:10:48

And people can pre-order, you know, the best kept secret.

3:10:51

And when will that be available?

3:10:53

On Amazon.

3:10:54

It will be probably Q1 or early Q2.

3:10:59

Of 2021.

3:11:00

Okay.

3:11:01

Beautiful.

3:11:02

Thank you, John.

3:11:03

Thank you, James.

3:11:04

It was awesome.

3:11:05

Thank you, Joe.

3:11:06

Thank you.