On April 28, the Pentagon gave believers in other-worldly phenomena some tantalizingly real pieces of evidence with the release of three short videos showing "unidentified aerial phenomena" - or UFOs. The Pentagon's confirmation of the footage has stirred the interest in aliens and out-of-this world phenomena once again. Here are a few podcasts about aliens and UFOs to listen to.
Hysteria 51: Hosts John Goforth and Brent Hand give listeners an everyman approach to the world of UFOs, aliens, mysteries and the paranormal. Goforth and Hand also get help from the Conspiracy Bot examining a different topic each week. Recent episodes include "The Movie: The Sequel," "The Gulf Breeze Incident(s)" and "Doomsday Clock: Countdown to Extinction." Find it: http://hysteria51.com/
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Netflix reboots ‘Unsolved Mysteries,’ featuring Pittsfield aliens in premiere |
PITTSFIELD, Mass. ( NEWS10 ) — Netflix is relaunching the classic docuseries “Unsolved Mysteries” on July 1, premiering with an episode titled, “Berkshires UFO.” The otherworldly first episode kicks off a six-episode summer miniseries, to be followed by six more spooky episodes in October.
“Berkshires UFO” will recount the story of an unidentified flying object seen in September 1969 in Sheffield, Massachusetts.
Thousands of Government UFO Reports Now Available at Canadian University | Space
The donation comes courtesy of Chris Rutkowski, a science writer and prolific Canadian ufologist. Rutkowski's collection includes more than 20,000 UFO reports filed over the past 30 years, plus more than 10,000 UFO-related documents from the Canadian government, according to a statement from the University of Manitoba. Many of these documents concern an infamous UFO encounter known as the Falcon Lake incident — an encounter that Rutkowski calls Canada's "best-documented UFO case.
As Vegas reawakens from COVID closure, Baker struggles back - Los Angeles Times
On a busy day, the restaurant's 29-year-old general manager could serve as many as 1,200 customers before straggling off after a 16-hour shift.
"We go as Vegas goes. A lot of businesses had to close," Dabour said. "Not because we were ordered to, but because, financially, it was cheaper to operate a closed business than an open business."
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But when Las Vegas reopened, any illusion that tourists would rush back evaporated. Like much of the U.S., the return to normal — whatever that is in the age of COVID-19 — would be slow and tentative. On Day 1, Baker was a virtual ghost town. Its parking lots were all but empty, and finding customers was like looking for the last couple of eggs after an Easter hunt.
Happening on Twitter
Today, I address the hard truth about the use of force in policing. There's way too much misinformation out there.… https://t.co/YZMn6swruj dbongino (from Florida, USA) Wed Jun 17 16:31:56 +0000 2020
Alex Zanardi will inspire you Listen to him talk about his extraordinary life in this week's podcast >>… https://t.co/Mo7Nz7pb7V F1 (from Great Britain) Wed Jun 17 16:58:00 +0000 2020
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