In Coast You Missed It 1/27/23

By Tim Binnall

Angels and demons, ancient giants, and alleged insights from an alien race known as the Thiaooubans were among the fascinating topics explored this past week on Coast to Coast AM. And, here at the C2C website, we told you about an odd orb photographed over a city in Iraq by the US military, this year's update to the Doomsday Clock, and a sausage-wielding prankster tormenting a town in New Zealand. Check out our round-up of highlights from the past week ... In Coast You Missed It.

Could accounts of giants roaming the planet in the distant past be more than mere myths and legends? Discussing this possibility on Wednesday night's program, anthropologist Mark A. Carpenter pointed to the mysterious 9,000-year-old skeleton known as the Kennewick Man as what could be evidence that enormous beings once inhabited the Earth. While the Smithsonian disputed claims that the individual was particularly sizeable, he argued that photos of the remains suggest that he could have been seven to eight feet tall. During his appearance, Carpenter also talked about the discovery of a giant tooth that was twice the size of the average human's and could have come from a 10 to 12-foot tall giant.

A pair of intriguing pieces of potential UFO evidence wound up in the news this past week. First, filmmaker Jeremy Corbell and C2C's George Knapp shared a remarkable photo of a metallic-looking orb that is said to have been filmed by a military spy plane flying over the Iraqi city of Mosul back in April of 2016. The nature of the puzzling object is a mystery, though the duo indicated that the case is among those being investigated by the Pentagon's UAP office. Meanwhile, in Indonesia, a webcam watching over a volcano in the city of Jakarta captured eerie footage of a mysterious ball of light passing through the night sky.

The fascinating tale of alleged alien abductee Michel Desmarquet was explored on Monday night's program as Samuel Chong detailed the late Australian man's claim that ETs took him to their home planet, Thiaoouba, for nine days. Among the insights said to have been imparted to him during this experience, were that the Great Pyramid is some kind of 'energy center' and that there is a portal to a parallel universe within the Bermuda Triangle. Chong also recounted how Desmarquet reported that the Thiaooubans traveled through space using a combination of teleportation and craft, which can travel faster than the speed of light.

The Doomsday Clock, a metaphorical measurement of how close humanity may be to destroying itself, received an ominous update this past week when it was advanced to 90 seconds to midnight, which is the closest it has ever been to its catastrophic culmination. The panel of experts from the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, who have overseen the annual evaluation for over seven decades, explained that Russia's invasion of Ukraine compelled them to change the 'time' for the first time in three years. The group cautioned that the conflict, as well as other pressing threats, such as climate change and bio-threats, have pushed the planet to the precipice of disaster.

Angels and demons took center stage on Saturday night's program as paranormal consultant June Lundgren discussed these two types of powerful, but distinctly different entities. She claimed that there are a staggering 30,000 'warrior angels' in physical form and an additional 300,000 of them that exist as spirits. These beings, Lundgren said, each have some kind of specialization and they are ultimately tasked with protecting the human race from negative energies. To that end, she indicated that demons can take on many different forms with the goal of manipulating and upsetting people that they target.

The strangest story of the week came by way of New Zealand, where the town of Surfdale is up in arms over a prankster who keeps leaving sausages in mailboxes. One of the first recipients of the weird 'deliveries' was Jacob Coetzee, who initially chalked the incident up to a drunken individual up to some mischief. However, when the sausages kept showing up in his mailbox over the next few weeks and months, the young man realized that something was amiss. Turning to a local social media group for answers, the community was stunned to discover that several residents had also fallen victim to the prankster who has now come to be known as the Surfdale Sausager.

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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