In Coast You Missed It 1/16/26

By Tim Binnall

The life and legacy of Edgar Cayce, technology concerns, and Bigfoot were among the fascinating topics featured this past week on Coast to Coast AM. Meanwhile, at the C2C website, we told you about a mystery hum plaguing a Connecticut community, a triangular UFO photographed in Australia, and a strange case of missing cigarettes blamed on paranormal activity. Check out our round-up of highlights from the past week ... In Coast You Missed It.

Bigfoot was in the spotlight again this past week on Coast to Coast AM, with a pair of programs exploring the legendary creature. First, on Saturday night's show, Jonathan and Sara Brown discussed the Sasquatch research they have conducted at their property on the Chehalis Reservation, where they captured a compelling thermal video featuring a mysterious figure moving its head in response to a whistle as well as other intriguing evidence for the cryptid. Then, on Sunday night's program, Bigfoot researcher Daniel Perez shared fascinating witness accounts, including a 1941 case in Canada wherein a hunter may have shot one of the creatures, but kept it secret until many years later.

A pair of maddening mysteries made headlines this past week, beginning with a Connecticut community that has been plagued by an inexplicable hum for the last several years. In response to irritated residents who lamented that their lives have been torn asunder by the sound, city officials signed off on an acoustic study to locate the noise and hopefully silence it for good. Meanwhile, in a Pennsylvania community, people say that they are dealing with a similar problem in the form of mysterious blasts that light up the night sky and shake their houses. Despite being captured on video, no one knows what is behind the booms that have been rocking Bensalem Township since at least 2024.

Famed psychic Edgar Cayce was in the spotlight on Thursday night's program as author Dr. Greg Little reflected on the life and legacy of the "Sleeping Prophet." He recounted the clairvoyant's unique technique of entering a trance state to allegedly access the Akashic Records and then issue a reading that he had no conscious memory of providing. Little marveled that Cayce covered a remarkable array of topics during these sessions, including ancient history, health, spirituality, and prophecy. He also detailed the psychic's insights on Atlantis, his rise to fame and work with clients like Woodrow Wilson and Thomas Edison, and his founding of the Association for Research and Enlightenment.

A rather fantastic photo of a triangular UFO caught our attention this week after an Australian miner revealed the image snapped early last month in the country's Pilbara region. The odd object was witnessed by six workers who noticed the aerial anomaly and struggled to explain what they were seeing. Also from the UFO front this past week, a Vermont lawmaker introduced a bill that would create a special government panel to investigate UAP sightings in the skies over the Green Mountain State. Finally, a peculiar new study produced a ranked list of states based on the odds of someone being abducted by aliens there, with New Hampshire taking the top spot and New Mexico coming in last.

Concerns about technology were a hot topic of conversation this past week on C2C, with two separate guests discussing issues surrounding the innovations that have become seemingly omnipresent in recent years. On Monday night's program, author Nick Begich talked about how the algorithms driving social media have allowed for proverbial bad actors to shape and manipulate public perception without users realizing it. Then, on Tuesday night's show, consumer advocate and privacy expert Katherine Albrecht returned to C2C after a nine-year hiatus to discuss how artificial intelligence may have a hand in fulfilling the ominous prophecies found in the Book of Revelation.

Easily the weirdest story of the week came by way of Washington state, where cops were called by a resident with some rather odd concerns about possible paranormal activity in their home. One imagines that the Moses Lake Police Department dispatcher did something of a double-take when the unnamed man reported that his hand-rolled cigarettes had mysteriously gone missing in a matter of seconds. Having searched high and low for the smokes, the resident was left with no other explanation for their disappearance besides the fantastic theory that "paranormal activity" was to blame. Unfortunately, cops arriving on the scene found no sign of ghosts, aliens, Bigfoot, or any other supernatural suspects.

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.

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