
December 5, 2001: The Case for NASA UFOs - David Sereda & Dan Aykroyd
Sereda details his investigation into anomalous objects captured on NASA shuttle camera feeds, recorded over six years by a Canadian cable station program manager named Martin Stubbs. The discussion connects these modern sightings to ancient history through the Dropa Stones, mysterious discs found in Tibetan-Chinese mountains in 1938 containing spiraling hieroglyphics that reportedly describe a spacecraft crash-landing 12,000 years ago from the star system Sirius.
The first hour features open lines with callers discussing the Mandela Effect, David Blaine's street levitation witnessed firsthand by a caller in Pittsburgh, and the breaking mainstream news of a possible submerged city discovered off Cuba's coast. Art notes the mainstream press took six months to cover the Cuban underwater discovery after it was first discussed on his program.
Key Moments
Aykroyd's Martha's Vineyard sighting: Dan Aykroyd describes stepping onto his Martha's Vineyard terrace at 3 a.m. and seeing two glowing white discs flying tandem at roughly 50,000 feet, witnessed by his wife and two friends.
Art's own triangle sighting: Art Bell recalls a silent triangle passing 150 feet above him and his wife, blocking out stars and moon, and the cost of going public with the story even as host of this program.
How NASA Select footage was captured: Sereda explains that Vancouver cable program manager Martin Stubbs spent six or seven years recording live unencrypted NASA Select C-band feeds, building the catalog of apparent UFO clips that launched the investigation.
STS-75 tether incident: 2-3 mile UFOs: Aykroyd and Sereda walk through the broken 12-mile tether footage, in which round objects with a hole and a notch pass clearly behind the tether 100 miles away, which Sereda measures at two to three miles in diameter.
Tether collected ten times the predicted energy: Sereda and Aykroyd describe the tether not simply breaking but melting after gathering ten times the energy physicists predicted from the ionosphere and zero-point space, hinting at a new energy source.
