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Tag: UFOs

  • Obama says aliens ‘are real, but I haven’t seen them’ in recent podcast interview

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    Did former President Barack Obama finally answer one of the world’s biggest mysteries?

    During an appearance Saturday on Brian Tyler Cohen’s podcast, the former commander in chief was asked directly if aliens were real.

    “They’re real, but I haven’t seen them,” Obama answered.

    The 44th president also said aliens were not being kept at the Nevada Air Force base known as Area 51.

    UFO SECRET FILES, DRONE SWARMS AND NUCLEAR-LINKED SIGHTINGS STUN EXPERTS IN 2025

    Former President Barack Obama joked on a podcast that aliens are real but said he has not seen them. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images;Netflix)

    “There’s no underground facility, unless there’s this enormous conspiracy and they hid it from the President of the United States,” Obama continued.

    Cohen then asked what Obama’s first question was after becoming president — and it again involved aliens.

    “Uh, where are the aliens?” he joked.

    JD VANCE SAYS UFOS, ALIENS COULD BE ‘SPIRITUAL FORCES’ AS VP VOWS TO ‘GET TO THE BOTTOM’ OF MYSTERY IN SKIES

    A UFO is circled in red in a black and white surveillance image

    Enigma has received more than 9,000 witness sightings of mysterious objects within 10 miles of United States’ shorelines since August 2025, according to the company’s website. (iStock)

    Saturday’s interview was not the first time Obama talked about the possible existence of extraterrestrial life.

    During a 2021 appearance on “The Late Late Show with James Corden,” Obama said that after taking office, he sought information on aliens and whether they were being studied in a secret lab. He was told the answer was “no.”

    But Obama did note that officials are seriously investigating aircraft that behave in seemingly unexplainable ways.

    HOUSE WITNESS TESTIFIES UFOS NEARLY ACTIVATED RUSSIAN NUCLEAR MISSILES DURING 1982 INCIDENT

    A stock photo of UFOs

    Crowdsourced data in 2025 mapped clusters of UFO and underwater object sightings along U.S. coastlines. (iStock)

    “There is footage and records of objects in the skies that we don’t know exactly what they are,” he said. “We can’t explain how they moved, their trajectory. They did not have an easily explainable pattern. I think people still take seriously trying to investigate and figure out what that is.”

    Fox News White House correspondent Peter Doocy later asked President Joe Biden about Obama’s comments, referring to unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP).

    “What do you think that it is?”

    Biden replied, “I would ask (Obama) again.”

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    UAPs have gained attention in recent years, including from the federal government.

    Congress passed the Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena Disclosure Act in 2023 and the Department of War has also created the All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office.

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  • Explosive new documentary probes ’80-year global coverup’ of UFO secrets

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    For decades, military pilots, radar operators, and ordinary citizens alike have reported strange objects darting through the skies, often dismissed by officials or buried under classification.

    Despite congressional hearings and government task forces, little clarity has emerged about what Americans are actually seeing.

    Now, the director of a new explosive documentary is pulling back the curtain on that mystery. 

    Director and producer Dan Farah sat down with Fox News’ Bret Baier on Friday to discuss his new documentary, “The Age of Disclosure.”

    UFO TRACKER MAPS EERIE CLUSTERS OF UNIDENTIFIED OBJECTS LURKING BENEATH US SHORELINES: ‘WE’RE BEING LIED TO’

    Director Dan Farah’s documentary ‘The Age of Disclosure’ features 34 senior U.S. officials revealing an alleged 80-year government cover-up of non-human intelligence. (The Age of Disclosure)

    “For a very long time, the public, Congress, and even the President have been kept out of the loop on this subject,” Farah said. “In the last few years, senior members of Congress, senior members of the administration, thanks to whistleblowers, have found out what’s been going on, and they are now in pursuit of the truth for themselves and for the American people.”

    The film explores an alleged “80-year global cover-up” of non-human intelligent life and a secret race among world powers to reverse-engineer advanced technology of non-human origin. It features interviews with 34 senior members of the U.S. government, military, and intelligence community — including Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

    “Every single person I interviewed made it very clear that it was no longer a question of whether this was a real situation,” he said. “It’s a very real situation.”

    Farah, who worked on the film for more than three years, said each person he spoke to had “direct knowledge of this issue” and “extreme credibility.”

    “We’ve had repeated instances of something operating in the airspace over restricted nuclear facilities, and it’s not ours,” Rubio said in the trailer.

    He said the film reveals how the U.S. government is engaged in a “high-stakes, secret Cold War race with adversarial nations like China and Russia to reverse engineer technology of non-human origin.”

    HOUSE WITNESS TESTIFIES UFOS NEARLY ACTIVATED RUSSIAN NUCLEAR MISSILES DURING 1982 INCIDENT

    An alien spaceship

    Director Dan Farah’s new documentary ‘The Age of Disclosure’ explores an alleged 80-year government cover-up of non-human intelligent life and UAP encounters. (iStock)

    “The first country that cracks the code on this technology will be the leader for years to come,” said Jay Stratton, a former Defense Intelligence Agency official and director of the government’s UAP Task Force, in the film’s trailer.

    Farah said some are calling it “the Manhattan Project on steroids.”

    “The fear here is that if another nation wins this race it could really change the lay of the land in terms of power,” he said.

    But skepticism surrounding UAPs remains. Farah said the question now isn’t whether UAPs exist, but where they come from, who controls them and what their purpose is.

    He said joking about this topic is “the equivalent of laughing at a terrorist threat.”

    “Who would do that?” he said. “It makes no sense when you think about it. You know, if someone said, ‘Hey, there’s this constant terrorist threat. Terrorists are penetrating the airspace over our nuclear weapons sites.’ Who would laugh at that? It makes no sense.”

    JD VANCE SAYS UFOS, ALIENS COULD BE ‘SPIRITUAL FORCES’ AS VP VOWS TO ‘GET TO THE BOTTOM’ OF MYSTERY IN SKIES

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio listens to a question

    Secretary of State Marco Rubio listens to a question as he speaks to the media after visiting the Civil-Military Coordination Center in southern Israel on October 24, 2025. (Getty Images)

    High-level officials in the film claim the issue was moved away from presidential oversight, with defense contractors “gatekeeping information.” However, Farah said members of Congress and the Trump administration are now working to uncover answers.

    “Now we have leaders in Congress and in the administration that are trying to get to the bottom of it, and there are people in this film who are respected in their fields, who say they have seen these craft and have seen the recovered non-human bodies,” he said.

    He said on-the-record interviews are even more important in this digital age, with many people dismissing everything they see as fake or artificial intelligence. He hopes the film will serve as the evidence many believe doesn’t exist.

    “Some officials go on record claiming to have seen craft and non-human beings with their own eyes, and these are people who are putting their reputation and their names on the line,” he said.

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    Farah said he thinks President Donald Trump could be the first president to speak openly about this unexplained phenomenon.

    “I think it’s only a matter of time at this point before we have a sitting president step to the microphone and have the biggest moment a leader can possibly have, which is telling all of humanity that we’re not alone in the universe and that the United States intends to lead the way,” Farah said.

    The film will be released on Nov. 21 and will play in select theaters in New York, Washington D.C., and Los Angeles, and will also be available worldwide to purchase or rent on Amazon Prime Video.

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  • Dan Aykroyd on UFOs and the Wonder of What’s Out There – Houston Press

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    As The Unbelievable returns for its third season, few hosts could guide audiences through stories of the strange and supernatural with as much curiosity and charm as Dan Aykroyd. The comedy legend — whose career has spanned GhostbustersThe Blues Brothers, and countless other classics — has long been fascinated by the unseen and unexplained. And this latest season continues that tradition, mixing wonder, science, and storytelling in a way only Aykroyd can.

    When I caught up with him, Aykroyd was as thoughtful and engaging as ever — equal parts scientist, historian, and storyteller.

    “Every human being is astounded by unbelievable acts of survival, unbelievable weather events, and stories that just drop your jaw,” he said. “As a human being interested in what’s going on with my fellow man — climate, weather, disasters — I thought, I’m definitely going to enjoy presenting and researching cases I hadn’t even heard of.”

    He continued, “When they came to me with this show, I thought, this is a great opportunity to entertain people, educate people, and inspire them to do their own research. And yeah,” he added with a grin, “to blow minds. That’s a big part of why I got on board.”


    The new season of The Unbelievable explores more of those “mind-blowing” cases — including the now-famous 1994 Ariel School sighting in Zimbabwe, where dozens of children reported seeing the same UFO.

    “I’ve followed that story for years,” Aykroyd said. “I’m a MUFON subscriber — that’s the Mutual UFO Network, the primary scientific body that researches these things. From the very beginning, I knew that the Ariel sighting would be a great story to include.”

    He leaned in, describing the case with fascination. “Two vessels landed, two sets of beings got out — according to some of the kids. And when they went back and interviewed them in their twenties, the stories held up. Some were terrified, but others said they received telepathic messages: watch the trees, take care of the planet. There was a tall being and a short being — and they seemed to have friction between them. It’s a wonderful story. And true or not,” he added, “I believe it’s true.”


    Aykroyd’s fascination with UFOs goes far beyond the show. It’s something that’s been part of his family for generations.

    “My mother had a sighting in Ottawa in 1947,” he recalled. “She was walking down Spark Street after work — she was a secretary for the Minister of Munitions and Supply during World War II — and she looked up and saw an orb, like a Christmas tree bulb blinking green and red. It hovered there for almost a minute before shooting straight up into the sky and disappearing.”

    He said those stories stuck with him — the magazines she kept around the house, the headlines about alien encounters — and eventually led to his own experiences. “I had a sighting in Martha’s Vineyard with three other people,” he said. “Two glowing orbs moving in formation across the night sky — silent, fast, deliberate. I woke everyone up to see it. You could tell it wasn’t a meteor. It was directed flight. I’d say they were moving 20,000 miles an hour.”

    He continued, “Then there was one in Montreal. My friend and I were in a hotel room, 20th floor, looking out over the St. Lawrence River. We saw this gray, rectangular object — probably 150 feet long — just hovering outside the window. It had lights underneath, like a bunch of grapes, and made no sound at all. It slowly turned and drifted away over the river until it vanished. It was beautiful, really.”

    And as if that weren’t enough, there was one more. “Years later on my farm, I saw this little red light above the power lines. I thought it was a helicopter checking the cables, but then it started moving over the lake — completely silent. I flashed my headlights, and it came right over me. Seventy feet up, no sound, no propulsion, just light. It hovered there for a few seconds, then drifted away. I wasn’t scared,” he said. “I was just fascinated. I think they were recharging — maybe drawing power from the lines. The other one in Montreal? Probably just sightseeing.”

    He laughed. “I don’t think I was chosen or anything. I just happened to be looking in the right direction.”

    With the U.S. government now openly discussing “UAPs,” or Unidentified Aerial Phenomena, I asked if the rebranding and new transparency felt validating.

    “It does,” Aykroyd said. “I think the new term — unexplainable aerial platform — just sounds more scientific. I call them hyperdynamic, super-advanced vessels operated by who knows what or who. Nobody knows for sure, and I’m not going to presume to say who’s behind the wheel. But yes, it’s validating. For years people like me have been talking about these things, and now governments are admitting: we can’t explain it either.”

    For Aykroyd, this fascination isn’t about fear — it’s about curiosity and humility.

    “Why did they land in a schoolyard?” he wondered aloud. “Maybe innocence is where truth lives. Maybe they were reminding us of something about our planet, about empathy. Whatever they are, they keep us asking questions — and that’s what keeps us human.”

    Before we wrapped, Aykroyd offered one last grin and a perfectly on-brand sign-off:
    “If you do consume beverage alcohol,” he said, “remember Crystal Head Vodka. Made in Canada. Zero additives. Only sixty-five calories a shot.”

    Even after decades of fame, film, and fascination, Dan Aykroyd remains exactly what you hope he’d be — equal parts believer, entertainer, and storyteller, still looking to the skies and asking the right questions.

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    Brad Gilmore

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  • The 4 Big Questions the Pentagon’s New UFO Report Fails to Answer

    The 4 Big Questions the Pentagon’s New UFO Report Fails to Answer

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    But what, then, were those programs? Herein lies the most intriguing—and potentially ground-breaking—question that the Pentagon study leaves us wondering: What exactly are the secret compartmentalized programs that the whistleblowers and government witnesses misidentified as being related to UAP technology? What, exactly, are the Pentagon, intelligence community, or defense contractors working on that, from a concentric circle or two away inside the shadowy world of SAPs, looks and sounds like reverse-engineering out-of-this-world technology or even studying so-called “non-human biologics”?

    There are at least four clear possibilities.

    Secret Tech From Foreign Nations

    First, what exotic technological possibilities have been recovered from unknown terrestrial sources? For example, if the government is working on reverse-engineering technologies, those technologies are likely from advanced adversary nation-states like China, Russia, and Iran, and perhaps even quasi-allies like Israel that may be more limited in their technology-sharing with the US. What have other countries mastered that we haven’t?

    A Question of ‘Peculiar Characteristics’

    Second, what technologies has the US mastered that the public doesn’t know about? One of the common threads of UFO sightings across decades have been secret military aircraft and spacecraft in development or not yet publicly acknowledged. For example, the CIA estimated that the U-2 spy plane in the 1950s accounted for as much as half of reported UFO sightings. And the AARO report spends a half-dozen pages documenting how confusion over subsequent generations of secret US government aircraft appear to have also contributed to the great intergalactic game of telephone of UFO programs inside the government, including modern Predator, Reaper, and Global Hawk drones. AARO investigated one claim where a witness reported hearing a former US military service member had touched an extraterrestrial spacecraft, but when they tracked down the service member, he said that the conversation was likely a garbled version of the time he touched an F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighter at a secret facility.

    There are surely other secret craft still in testing and development now, including the B-21 stealth bomber, which had its first test flight in November and is now in testing at Edwards Air Force Base in California, as well as others we don’t know about. The government can still surprise us with unknown craft—like the until-then-unknown modified stealthy helicopter left behind on the Pakistan raid to kill Osama bin Laden. And some of these still-classified efforts are likely causing UFO confusion too: AARO untangled one witness’s claim of spotting a UAP with “peculiar characteristics” at a specific time and place and were able to determine, “at the time the interviewee said he observed the event, the DOD was conducting tests of a platform protected by a SAP. The seemingly strange characteristics reported by the interviewee match closely with the platform’s characteristics, which was being tested at a military facility in the time frame the interviewee was there.” So what was that craft—and what were its “peculiar characteristics?”

    Relatedly, the US military has a classified spaceship, the X-37B, that has regularly orbited around the Earth since its first mission in 2010—it just blasted off on its seventh and most recent mission in December—and its previous, sixth, mission lasted a record-breaking 908 days in orbit. The Pentagon has said remarkably little about what it does up there for years at a time. What secret space-related or aviation-related programs is the government running that outsiders confuse as alien spacecraft?

    A Material Matter

    The third likely area of tech development that might appear to outsiders to be UFO-related is more speculative basic research and development: What propulsion systems or material-science breakthroughs are defense contractors at work on right now that could transform our collective future? Again, AARO found such confusion taking place: After one witness reported hearing that “aliens” had observed one secret government test, AARO traced the allegation back to find “the conversation likely referenced a test and evaluation unit that had a nickname with ‘alien’ connotations at the specific installation mentioned. The nature of the test described by the interviewee closely matched the description of a specific materials test conveyed to AARO investigators.” So what materials were being tested there?

    There are some puzzling materials-science breadcrumbs wrapped throughout the AARO report. It found one instance where “a private sector organization claimed to have in its possession material from an extraterrestrial craft recovered from a crash at an unknown location from the 1940s or 1950s. The organization claimed that the material had the potential to act as a THz frequency waveguide, and therefore, could exhibit ‘anti-gravity’ and ‘mass reduction’ properties under the appropriate conditions.” Ultimately, though, the new report concluded, “AARO and a leading science laboratory concluded that the material is a metallic alloy, terrestrial in nature, and possibly of USAF [US Air Force] origin, based on its materials characterization.”

    A Knowledge Limit

    Fourth and lastly is the category of the truly weird: Scientists at the forefront of physics point out that we should be humble about how little of the universe we truly understand; as Harvard astronomy chair Avi Loeb explains, effectively all that we’ve learned about relativity and quantum physics has unfolded in the span of a single human lifespan, and astounding new discoveries continue to amaze scientists. Just last summer, scientists announced they’d detected for the first time gravitational waves criss-crossing the universe that rippled through space-time, and astrophysicists continue to suspect that the universe is far weirder than we think. (Italian astrophysicist Carlo Rovelli last year posited the existence of “white holes” that would be related to black holes, which, he pointed out, were still a mystery just 25 years ago when he was starting his career.)

    Answers here could be almost unfathomably weird—think parallel dimensions or the ability to travel at a fraction of the speed of light. And one of the most intriguing questions left by the UAP “game of telephone” is whether there are truly astounding advances in physics that government scientists, defense contractors, or research laboratories or centers could be feeling around that could also appear from the outside to be UFO-related.

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    Garrett M. Graff

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  • If UFOs are real, I know a few musicians who will be very interested – National | Globalnews.ca

    If UFOs are real, I know a few musicians who will be very interested – National | Globalnews.ca

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    I’ve always dreamed of seeing a genuine honest-to-God UFO. Like Fox Mulder of The X-Files, I really want to believe there’s something Out There in the maybe two trillion galaxies in the observable universe.

    My grandparents lived just a few miles from the location of the infamous Falcon Lake Incident in 1967. Since then, I’ve been fascinated by the prospect of some kind of close encounter. I’m hoping that Star Trek will once again be prescient, and a Zefram Cochrane-like pioneer will launch the first warp drive flight (scheduled for April 5, 2061, a Borg invasion notwithstanding), attracting the attention of a passing Vulcan ship and thereby initiate First Contact.

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    I want there to be a black monolith with perfect proportions buried under my hydrangeas in the backyard that warns me to leave Europa alone. I dream of picking up an Alan Freed broadcast from 1955 on my little transistor radio, reflected back to us by a civilization somewhere within a 35-light-year radius (I’d prefer that to the Hitler stuff they had to deal with in Contact.) And those fast radio bursts? They’d better be actual interstellar/intergalactic WOW signals — especially this one. That would be a lot more fun than looking for hydroxyl emissions.

    But alas, even though I keep watching the skies, I’ve never seen anymore more than shootings stars and passing satellites and space stations.

    Lately, though, I’ve become more optimistic. First came the New York Times reports on US Navy pilots dealing with UAPs (Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon, the new re-branding for UFOs). Additional reporting piled up so high that this past week, whistleblowers testified under oath in front of the House Oversight Congressional Committee regarding an alleged massive coverup, claiming that “non-human” bodies and extraterrestrial technologies have been recovered from crashed vehicles.

    Millions of us await the truth, including a number of high-profile musicians.

    At the front of the line is Tom DeLonge, now back playing guitar with Blink-182, has been on the scent of aliens for decades, long before the group got together. Back in the band’s early days, he was known to spend hours on the tour bus looking out the window for UFOs. The band’s 1999 multi-platinum pop-punk classic, Enema of the State featured the song Aliens Exist.

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    It’s said that Tom’s relationship with the band — he was estranged from mates Mark Hoppus and Travis Barker for years before a 2022 reunion — was strained because of his passionate pursuit of theories and conspiracies involving aliens and UAPs.

    When he separated from Blink, Tom co-wrote a number of novels and non-fiction books about “sekret machines” (His term for UAPs; I’ve devoured them all) and was behind the History Channel series, Unidentified: Inside America’s UFO Investigation. Also during his hiatus, he founded To The Stars Academy of Arts & Sciences, a company with both an entertainment division and one seriously devoted to aerospace, ufology, and technological research. It’s stocked with academics, engineers, NASA scientists, and ex-government types, including at least one ex-CIA dude. The Academy has been relentless in demands for government transparency.

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    These days, he’s pretty excited about the latest revelations. On Blink-182’s current tour, bandmate Mark Hoppus has told the crowd “Tom was right.” Over at To the Stars, everyone is pretty pumped at what might be coming next. Meanwhile, if you ever have a chance to talk to Tom, ask him about his theories on “zero-point energy.” Prepare to spend a few hours on the subject.

    But Tom isn’t the only musician who wants the truth exposed. Matt Bellamy of Muse is another longtime UFOlogist. Not only has be expressed a desire to go alien hunting with Tom (he has a standing invitation to check out a warehouse near Las Vegas that’s apparently loaded with “weird alien [stuff]”) but he thinks he might have been abducted (probably by those damn Greys) at one point. He saw a flashing light in the woods at about one in the morning and went to check it out. The next thing he remembers is waking up at home. He does, however, admit that some recreational substances may have had a role and that it may have just been an ordinary helicopter. No word on if any probing was done. Meanwhile, he’ll continue to write songs with conspiratorial, cosmological, and astronomical themes.

    Black Francis of The Pixies has some thoughts about aliens, too, having written songs on the subject as part of the band as a solo artist. This stems from a 1965 sighting by his mom and several of his cousins. “There was a flying saucer floating above the house for half an hour and everyone just stood there and watched it. … It was just hovering. Then the state police came and chased it but they couldn’t catch up with it. My mother’s weird but she’s not that weird. She’s got no reason to make this stuff up.” Later he commented about The Pixies’ mission: “We’ve tried to elevate the sci-fi thing, make it more opera-ish, more of a serious rock thing. We want UFOs to be an acceptable topic. They’re romantic.”

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    Shaun Ryder of The Happy Mondays claims to have multiple encounters with flying saucers, saying “I don’t go looking for aliens. They find me.” At age 15, he and a mate were walking to a bus stop when “we just saw these things, zig-zagging about.” (He says he was way too young to be ingesting anything hallucinogenic.) This spurred a lifelong obsession with all things extraterrestrial — an multiple observations of UAPs (including from his own backyard) over the years. He, too, has made a documentary series on the subject.

    If aliens are looking for a place to land, Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones says he has it on good authority his Redlands estate in West Sussex was a landing site for UFOs back in 1968. I quote: “I’ve seen a few, but nothing that any of the ministries would believe. I believe they exist — plenty of people have seen them. They are tied up with a lot of things, like the dawn of man, for example. It’s not just a matter of people spotting a flying saucer. … I’m not an expert. I’m still trying to understand what’s going on.”

    And then there’s Dave Grohl. Foo Fighters is derived from the nickname given to Allied airmen who scrambled to investigate mysterious balls of fire — feu — along the French-German front in World War II. He even named his label Roswell Records after the town in New Mexico where they want us to believe a weather balloon crashed in 1947. If you believe that, then you probably think there’s nothing strange happening at Area 51 and nothing weird stored in Hanger 18.

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    Sadly, Elvis Presley, Jimi Hendrix, John Lennon, and Lemmy of Motorhead — all believers and witnesses — are no longer with us. But wherever their spirits are now, I’d like to believe that the truth has been revealed to them.

    Today, sightings are up across the board. And if you do encounter some of those bloody shape-shifting Reptilians, don’t turn your back, especially if they’re wearing a KEEP CALM AND PROBE ON t-shirt.

    Now if you’ll excuse me, there’s a man in a black suit and sunglasses who wants to see me about a flashy thing.


    Alan Cross is a broadcaster with Q107 and 102.1 the Edge and a commentator for Global News.

    Subscribe to Alan’s Ongoing History of New Music Podcast now on Apple Podcast or Google Play

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Alan Cross

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  • Congressional Hearing About UFOs Kicks Off This Week: “We’re Done With The Cover-Up”

    Congressional Hearing About UFOs Kicks Off This Week: “We’re Done With The Cover-Up”

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    Congress has typically been loath to discuss what the government knows about extraterrestrial life and unidentified flying objects but that ends this week as the House Oversight Committee plans to hold a hearing on Wednesday promising “three dynamite witnesses” who will reveal more details under oath.

    “This hearing is going to be different,” Tim Burchett, a House Republican who sits on the committee and who has been one of the most strident congressional voices in favor of releasing information related to unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs), promised Thursday.

    “We’ve requested documents, we’ve gone to interview pilots and been stonewalled by our Pentagon. It’s ridiculous; it’s been going on since the ‘40s,” the Republican from Tennessee said Saturday afternoon on Fox News. “We are taking the gloves off.”

    And it’s not just Republicans. Top Senate Democrat and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer introduced an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that would make public any government documents related to UAPs.

    “The American public has a right to learn about technologies of unknown origins, non-human intelligence, and unexplainable phenomena,” insisted the senior Senator from New York. “We are not only working to declassify what the government has previously learned about these phenomena but to create a pipeline for future research to be made public.”

    One of the scheduled witnesses will be David Grusch, a former intelligence official and the subject of an attention-grabbing headline in June that helped spark this most recent round of public interest in UFOs. In the piece, Grush alleged that the U.S. government was illegally withholding information related to its possession of “intact and partially intact craft of non-human origin”; subsequently, Grusch has suggested that the government has come into contact with “malevolent” alien pilots.

    As Vanity Fair’s Charlotte Klein reported at the time, the piece, which was written by two respected journalists and eventually published in a small science and defense outlet, had originally been brought to The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Politico, all of whom passed on the story.

    On Wednesday, Grusch will be joined by Ryan Graves, a former Navy pilot who claims to have seen multiple UAPs, and David Fravor, another former Navy pilot who witnessed what is now popularly known as the “tic tac” incident in 2004.

    According to Politico, the Pentagon was tracking around 650 incidents of unidentified aircraft as of April.

    Burchett said the US had evidence of technology that “defies all of our laws of physics.” He added: “We’re gonna get to the bottom of it, dadgummit. Whatever the truth may be. We’re done with the cover-up.”

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Taylor Swift Fans Help Debunk Fears Of UFOs In Florida Skies

    Taylor Swift Fans Help Debunk Fears Of UFOs In Florida Skies

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    A group Floridians cried out in shock recently as a mysterious glow took hold of the skies above them, with clips of the apparent UFO encounter going viral online — but Taylor Swift fans reassured them that it was simply concert lights.

    The singer performed in Tampa late last week at Raymond James Stadium, marking the first set of outdoor shows on her Eras Tour. However, lights from Swift’s production appeared to spill out to the surrounding night sky, with one nearby TikToker filming as onlookers panicked at the sight of a white glow among the clouds.

    “Oh, what the fuck? No fucking way. Holy shit!” the user said in one clip, suggesting that the lights could not have come from the pop concert. “That is not Taylor Swift!”

    In another video, the user spoke about packing up to prepare to flee.

    “We’re out. Let’s go. … That is not Taylor Swift. That’s some alien shit,” they said.

    The clips soon garnered thousands of comments from Swifties and others on TikTok who sought to dispel any fears of extraterrestrial activity — or at least joke about it.

    “The lights are on the ground, they’re just reflected by the clouds, not behind them as it appears,” one commenter said.

    “NOPE (Taylor’s Version),” quipped another, in a reference to director Jordan Peele’s sci-fi horror film from last year.

    One concert attendee shared footage from inside the stadium as Swift performed and lights beamed from the stage up into the night sky, writing, “sorry girl, its not a UFO.”

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  • The Truth About Aliens Is Still Out There

    The Truth About Aliens Is Still Out There

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    What were those three “aerial objects” downed following the Chinese spy balloon?

    The Atlantic

    The question is not whether aliens exist—I’m firmly in the “Hell yeah, they do!” camp—but rather when we’ll have enough hard evidence to end the decades-long debate over said existence.

    Believers in UFOs have gotten some tantalizing clues over the past few years. Those 2019 New York Times videos of zig-zagging, Tic Tac–like vessels with curious propulsion are always worth a rewatch. Likewise, the huge New Yorker feature by Gideon Lewis-Kraus, “How the Pentagon Started Taking UFOs Seriously,” is pretty much required reading before you offer a qualified opinion on the issue. As my colleague Marina Koren wrote yesterday, UFO sightings are indeed getting more frequent, even if the data don’t necessarily scream ALIENS!

    Nevertheless, it’s not just you; the events of the past week have felt different. Our military’s targeted takedown of multiple aerial objects over North America brought UFOs back to the forefront of our national conversation—enough to elicit a presidential address on the matter this afternoon.

    Hollywood has primed us for what to expect from our commander in chief ahead of an interstellar crisis. (Think Bill Pullman’s predawn megaphone pump-up speech before the Independence Day climax, or Morgan Freeman somberly telling his Deep Impact constituents that, yes, the comet is coming, and millions of you are screwed.) Today, sadly, President Joe Biden did not unveil the grand truth about UFOs with clasped hands on the Resolute desk, nor did he march down the dramatic carpeted corridor leading to the East Room for an Osama-bin-Laden-is-dead-style surprise. Like much of the Biden presidency, today’s event had a decidedly un-Hollywood feel to it. In fact, the speech wasn’t in the White House at all but next door, in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building’s sterile and cacophonous South Court Auditorium. It felt less like a triumphant milestone in our shared knowledge of the universe and more like an inoffensive midday presentation at an auto show.

    Biden began by explaining that the U.S. and Canadian militaries were still working to recover the debris from the three recently downed somethings. “We don’t yet know exactly what these three objects were,” he said, tantalizingly. “But nothing right now suggests they were related to China’s spy-balloon program or that they were surveillance vehicles from any other country.”

    This is when the aliens-are-real crowd’s ears momentarily perked up. A sentence later, they perked back down.

    “The intelligence community’s current assessment is that these three objects were most likely balloons tied to private companies, recreation, or research institutions studying weather or conducting other scientific research,” Biden said. He rejected the idea that there has been a “sudden increase in the number of objects in the sky” and instead offered that sightings have increased because our radar capabilities have increased. To be sure, he did not say the word aliens.

    Indeed, Biden seemed less interested in rallying us for alien warfare and more intent on calming U.S.-China relations. As the speech ended, a reporter asked Biden whether his family’s business relationships overseas have compromised his ability to deal with China. Another yelled that the recent shootdowns have been criticized as an “overreaction.” For a moment, Biden appeared ready to respond, but he decided otherwise.

    The raison d’être of his speech today—government transparency—ended up dominating online chatter in the hours that followed, for what conservatives (and some UFO enthusiasts) saw as a glaring lack of it.

    And so, the question remains: What were those three “aerial objects” intentionally downed following the Chinese surveillance balloon? If movies have taught us anything, it’s that the government is currently building a massive underground ark where a small percentage of the population can stave off an impending large-scale intergalactic attack, meaning today’s press conference was merely a way of buying more time. If logic has taught us anything, it’s that the truth is more prosaic, and one of the objects in question may belong to a midwestern club of balloon enthusiasts currently missing a balloon.

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    John Hendrickson

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  • U.S. General Doesn’t Rule Out Aliens After Multiple UFOs Shot Down By Military

    U.S. General Doesn’t Rule Out Aliens After Multiple UFOs Shot Down By Military

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    Several unidentified flying objects have been shot down by the U.S. military in recent days, and so far there’s no explanation for them.

    At least one high-ranking official won’t rule out the possibility that they could be extraterrestrial in origin.

    “I’ll let the intel community and the counterintelligence community figure that out,” Gen. Glen VanHerck, commander of NORAD, told reporters on Sunday when asked about the possibility of aliens. “I haven’t ruled out anything at this point.”

    A suspected Chinese spy balloon transfixed the nation when it was spotted over Montana in January and ultimately shot down when it reached the Atlantic earlier this month.

    Since then, at least three more objects have been blown out of the skies. One was initially described as a balloon, but VanHerck hedged when asked if these additional objects were also balloons.

    “I’m not gonna categorize them as balloons. We’re calling them ‘objects’ for a reason,” he said. “Certainly the event off the South Carolina coast for the Chinese spy balloon, that was clearly a balloon. These were objects.”

    He also said he’s not certain how the objects are even flying.

    “It could be a gaseous type of balloon inside a structure, or it could be some type of a propulsion system,” he said.

    One of the objects, shot down on Friday over Alaska, was described as “cylindrical and silverish gray” and with “no identifiable propulsion system.” Another, shot down along the U.S.-Canadian border, was described as a “small, cylindrical object.” The third, shot down on Sunday over Lake Huron, was described by officials as “an octagonal structure” with strings.

    “We’re going to remain vigilant about our airspace.” White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters on Friday. “We’re going to remain vigilant about the skies over the United States.”

    It’s not year clear if the objects being shot down are related to the growing number of sightings of what the Pentagon now calls “unidentified aerial phenomena,” which is their preferred term for UFOs.

    Last year, an American Airlines pilot reported a “long cylindrical object” in the skies over New Mexico, and several by U.S. Navy pilots have described and attempted to track small fast-moving objects, including some “without discernible means of propulsion.”

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  • UFO Reports Rise To 510, Probably Not Aliens But Still A Threat To U.S.

    UFO Reports Rise To 510, Probably Not Aliens But Still A Threat To U.S.

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. has now collected 510 reports of unidentified flying objects, many of which are flying in sensitive military airspace. While there’s no evidence of extraterrestrials, they still pose a threat, the government said in a declassified report summary released Thursday.

    Last year the Pentagon opened an office, the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, solely focused on receiving and analyzing all of those reports of unidentified phenomena, many of which have been reported by military pilots. It works with the intelligence agencies to further assess those incidents.

    The events “continue to occur in restricted or sensitive airspace, highlighting possible concerns for safety of flight or adversary collection activity,” the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said in its 2022 report.

    The classified version of the report addresses how many of those objects were found near locations where nuclear power plants operate or nuclear weapons are stored.

    In this image from a 2015 video provided by the Department of Defense, an unexplained object called “Gimbal” is seen as it soars high along the clouds, traveling against the wind. (Department of Defense via AP)

    The 510 objects include 144 objects previously reported and 366 new reports. In both the old and new cases, after analysis, the majority have been determined to exhibit “unremarkable characteristics,” and could be characterized as unmanned aircraft systems, or balloon-like objects, the report said.

    But the office is also tasked with reporting any movements or reports of objects that may indicate that a potential adversary has a new technology or capability.

    The Pentagon’s anomaly office is also to include any unidentified objects moving underwater, in the air, or in space, or something that moves between those domains, which could pose a new threat.

    ODNI said in its report that efforts to destigmatize reporting and emphasize that the objects may pose a threat likely contributed to the additional reports.

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