By Tim Binnall
Encounters with humanoids, lunar anomalies, and a terrifying alien experience were among the fascinating realms explored this past week on Coast to Coast AM. And, here at the C2C website, we told you about a fantastic UFO sighting filmed by an airline pilot, possible drone footage of the Lake Champlain Monster, and a bizarre dispute between a conspiracy theorist and a Florida county. Check out our round-up of highlights from the past week ... In Coast You Missed It.
A terrifying tale of being held captive by aliens took center stage on Saturday night's program as author and former deputy sheriff Ron Felber recalled the chilling story of Elise and Tom Gifford. He explained that the couple were camping in the Mojave Desert in 1989 when they began seeing glowing objects in the sky. Although they initially attributed the anomalies to nearby Nellis Air Force Base, they soon realized something was amiss when the lights began moving toward them. When Tom grabbed a shotgun to defend themselves, the couple's trailer was swarmed by goblin-like creatures and enormous entities that tortured them with nightmarish telepathic visions.
A pair of legendary lake monsters swam their way into the headlines this past week, beginning with an intriguing piece of drone footage from Lake Champlain. The video, captured by a pair of filmmakers making a fictional movie about the site's resident cryptid, Champ, features a peculiar shape that they believe just might be the elusive aquatic creature. However, not everyone was convinced by the footage as seasoned Champ researcher Katie Elizabeth told C2C that the anomaly was probably just a rock. Meanwhile, over at Loch Ness, 'monster' hunters using a hydrophone to listen for underwater sounds picked up a puzzling pulsing noise that they likened to a heartbeat.
Humanoid encounters were in the spotlight on Sunday night's program as author Albert Rosales shared an array of truly bizarre entity cases he has collected over the years. One such incident involved a Miami security guard who reported seeing a trio of seven-foot-tall beings that sported cat-like eyes. Having amassed a massive database of cases from around the world, Rosales theorized that these humanoids, which come in all shapes and sizes, could be traveling here via wormholes or interdimensional portals. During his appearance, he also talked about weirdness in the waters off the coast of Florida which suggests that there could be an alien base in that area.
This past week featured a particularly thrilling UFO video captured by a Boeing 747 pilot flying from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia to Abuja, Nigeria. Filmed from within the cockpit of the aircraft, the footage features Captain Ruud Van Pangemanan and the rest of the flight crew reacting in amazement as a sizeable orb appeared out on the horizon. To the astonishment of the witnesses, the curious ball of light was soon joined by a second illumination. The pilot later mused that the objects were genuine UFOs as, based on his experience and observation, they could not have been terrestrial aircraft, drones, stars, or satellites.
Could anomalous formations spotted on the Moon be signs of an ancient civilization? This question was revisited on Tuesday night's show when Richard C. Hoagland returned to the program with an update on his decades-long research into that tantalizing scenario. He claimed that the lunar surface is replete with evidence suggesting that it was once inhabited and asserted that NASA has long grappled with if and how to reveal this information to the public. Hoagland shared a number of intriguing new images from the Chinese lunar landers that show peculiarities that seemingly bolster his contention that people once lived on the Moon.
By far the weirdest story of the week came by way of Florida, where a conspiracy theorist filed a lawsuit against a county after he was unceremoniously tossed out of a public board meeting. The bizarre dispute began back in May when Justin Harvey used the public comment portion of a Brevard County Commission meeting to put forward the outrageous idea that the Challenger space shuttle tragedy of 1986 was a hoax. Shortly into his presentation, he was informed that the time was to be used for pertinent county business rather than litigating a nearly 40-year-old conspiracy theory. This led to a wild scene wherein he was ultimately removed by police, which his newly filed lawsuit asserts was a form of "viewpoint discrimination."
Coast Insiders can check out all this week's shows as well as the last seven years of C2C programs in our enormous archive. Not a Coast Insider yet? Sign up today.