By Tim Binnall
Mysterious fireball events, alternative possibilities for UFO occupants, and evidence for the afterlife were among the fascinating topics explored this past week on Coast to Coast AM. Meanwhile, at the C2C website, we told you a weird UFO seen over Western Canada, a South Korean mountain inadvertently 'cursed' by a TV fortune teller, and a bizarre zebra hoax involving a donkey with stripes painted on it. Check out our round-up of highlights from the past week ... In Coast You Missed It.
An intriguing possible intersection of UFOs, interdimensional beings, and time travel was explored on Sunday night's program by UFO investigator Robert Morningstar. He posited that what we perceive as off-world visitors aboard interstellar craft could be ultraterrestrial entities that have been here far longer than us or even time travelers. To that end, he talked about an alleged secret government project known as "Looking Glass," wherein the 'powers that be' developed the technology to look into the future and observed an alien invasion. Morningstar also discussed 'transmorphic entities,' which he described as interdimensional beings comprised of "pure mind energy."
A South Korean mountain found itself at the center of an odd story this past week thanks to a fortune teller's endorsement that went askew. After the popular TV mystic appeared on a variety show and told viewers they could improve their luck by climbing the country's Gwanaksan Mountain. The claim sparked something of a craze with thousands of young people flocking to the site in the hopes of finding good fortune and, of course, documenting their visit on social media. Alas, the mountain's proverbial fifteen minutes of fame have resulted in careless visitors leaving trash strewn all over the place and even one miscreant who spray-painted a popular resting rock with a message mocking the location's purported positive power.
Could a recent surge in large fireball events in Earth's atmosphere be connected to a brown dwarf star system orbiting the sun? Researcher Marshall Masters made the case for just such an unsettling scenario on Monday night's program. He asserted that the substellar object, dubbed Nemesis, is traveling through Jupiter and Mars and, in the process, sending space debris towards our planet. This disruptive passage is spawning the fireballs, he claimed, noting that they are peculiarly entering the atmosphere at steep but shallow angles with huge explosions. Chillingly, Masters indicated that Nemesis is accompanied by the infamous apocryphal world Nibiru, which could bring with it catastrophic events here on Earth.
UFOs and their perceived occupants headlined several stories this past week, beginning with actress Goldie Hawn sharing a remarkable and vivid account of what she believes was an encounter with alien beings during the 1960s. Later in the week, a mysterious glowing blob was seen floating across the sky of Western Canada by multiple witnesses who were left scratching their heads at the puzzling sight. Meanwhile, in an interview with Stephen Colbert, former President Barack Obama once again dismissed UFO and alien conspiracy theories by insisting that the 'powers that be' could not keep such secrets. To that end, on Friday, the federal government released a slew of previously unseen UFO files, photos, and videos, though no smoking gun as far as ETs are concerned.
Near-death experiences (NDEs) and the afterlife took center stage on Thursday night's program as professor Michael Zigarelli detailed multiple lines of evidence that, he argued, confirm the existence of an 'other side.' Having examined thousands of accounts from individuals who experienced death and lived to tell the proverbial tale, he marveled that they display an incredible consistency despite coming from witnesses across time and culture. Zigarelli specifically pointed to aspects such as having an out-of-body experience, traveling through a tunnel, having a life review, and encountering beings of light.
By far the most bizarre story of the week came from Albania, where a prankster painted stripes on a donkey and fooled people into thinking that it was an escaped zebra. The wild hoax, which occurred in the country's capital city of Yerevan, began when the seemingly exotic animal suddenly appeared on a major thoroughfare. Sharing footage of the striped creature, a local media outlet quickly reported that, in an "extraordinary incident," a zebra had escaped from the city zoo. To what one imagines was their profound embarrassment, the website subsequently posted a retraction when the facility reached out and explained that they had been duped by a hooligan with a donkey and some hair dye.
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.