| Websites: |
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• huntfortheskinwalker.com
• klas-tv.com |
| Books: |
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• Hunt for the Skinwalker
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George Knapp is a 14-time Emmy Award-winning journalist whose reporting on Nevada's infamous Area 51 military base was selected by UPI as Best Individual Achievement by a Reporter (1989). Other awards include the Associated Press's Mark Twain Award for news writing and the Edward R. Murrow Award for Investigative Reporting. George is an anchor and reporter for the CBS affiliate KLAS-TV in Las Vegas and he also writes a weekly column for a Las Vegas newspaper.
Additionally, George hosts Coast to Coast AM on the third and fourth Sundays of the month.
Tribute to Art Bell |
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| Wednesday July 18, 2007 |
George Noory and a cavalcade of guests paid tribute to Art Bell, and clips of some of Art's most memorable on-air moments were played. In live appearances Whitley Strieber, Richard C. Hoagland, Ian Punnett, Dannion Brinkley, George Knapp, Seth Shostak, Evelyn Paglini, Sean David Morton, Linda Moulton Howe, Bruce Goldberg, Neil Slade, Brendan Cook and Nick Begich all shared accolades and memories of working with Art.
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Host: George Noory
Skinwalker Ranch & Area 51 |
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| Sunday February 11, 2007 |
Investigative journalist George Knapp and researcher Colm Kelleher discussed their book Hunt for the Skinwalker, which chronicles bizarre paranormal events that were scientifically studied at a ranch in Utah.
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Host: Art Bell
Rebroadcast: Skinwalker Ranch |
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| Wednesday January 3, 2007 |
In a rebroadcast from 1/10/06, Colm Kelleher and George Knapp discussed their investigation of the Skinwalker Ranch.
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Host: George Noory
The Skinwalker Ranch |
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| Tuesday January 10, 2006 |
Journalist George Knapp and research scientist Colm Kelleher, the authors of Hunt for the Skinwalker, shared details about a ranch in Utah where the "Gorman" (a pseudonym) family was terrorized by a series of unexplainable encounters that included UFOs of various shapes, mutilated cattle, disembodied voices, poltergeist activity and invincible creatures. The isolated location in northeastern Utah has a history of bizarre reports dating back at least 50 years, with many of the accounts being catalogued by a science teacher, Junior Hicks. The local Native-American tribe, the Utes, referred to the ranch area as the "path of the Skinwalker," and advised avoiding this land. According to their legend, a skinwalker is an "evil sorcerer," capable of shape-shifting and turning into various animals, explained Knapp. Indeed, when the Gorman family first moved into the ranch in 1994 they encountered a wolf the size of a small horse that was impervious to bullets, even though it was struck numero
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Host: George Noory